Mothers and children: Jewish family life in medieval Europe 9780691091662, 9781400849260, 9780691130293

This book presents a synthetic history of the family--the most basic building block of medieval Jewish communities--in G

124 38

English Pages 320 [294] Year 2004

Report DMCA / Copyright

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE

Table of contents :
Frontmatter
Illustrations (page ix)
Acknowledgments (page xi)
Abbreviations (page xv)
INTRODUCTION (page 1)
CHAPTER ONE. Birth (page 21)
CHAPTER TWO. Circumcision and Baptism (page 55)
CHAPTER THREE. Additional Birth Rituals (page 92)
CHAPTER FOUR. Maternal Nursing and Wet Nurses: Feeding and Caring for Infants (page 119)
CHAPTER FIVE. Parents and Children: Competing Values (page 154)
CONCLUSIONS (page 184)
Notes (page 191)
Glossary (page 241)
Bibliography (page 243)
Index (page 269)
Recommend Papers

Mothers and children: Jewish family life in medieval Europe
 9780691091662, 9781400849260, 9780691130293

  • 0 0 0
  • Like this paper and download? You can publish your own PDF file online for free in a few minutes! Sign Up
File loading please wait...
Citation preview

Mothers and Children

JEWS, CHRISTIANS, AND MUSLIMS FROM

THE ANCIENT TO THE MODERN WORLD SERIES EDITORS R. STEPHEN HUMPHREYS, WILLIAM CHESTER JORDAN, AND PETER SCHAFER

Imperialism and Jewish Society, 200 B.c.k. to 640 C.E. by Seth Schwartz

A Shared World: Christians and Muslims in the Early Modern Mediterranean by Molly Greene Beautiful Death: Jewish Poetry and Martyrdom in Medieval France by Susan L. Einbinder Power in the Portrayal: Representations of Jews and Muslims in Eleventh- and Twelfth-Century Islamic Spain by Ross Brann 'rror of His Beauty: Feminine Images of God from the Bible to the Early Kabbalah by Peter Schiifer

the Shadow of the Virgin: Inquisitors, Friars, and Conversos in Guadalupe, Spain by Gretchen D. Starr-LeBeau The Curse of Ham: Race and Slavery in Early Judaism, Christianity, and Islam by David M. Goldenberg Resisting History: Historicism and Its Discontents in German-Jewish Thought by David N. Myers Mothers and Children: Jewish Family Life in Medieval Europe by Elisheva Baumgarten A Jewish Renaissance in Fifteenth-Century Spain by Mark D. Meyerson e Handless Maiden: Moriscos and the Politics of Religion in Early Modern Spain by Mary Elizabeth Perry Poverty and Charity in the Jewish Community of Medieval Egypt by Mark R. Cohen Reckless Rites: Purim and the Legacy of Jewish Violence by Elliot Horowitz

Living Together, Living Apart: Rethinking Jewish-Christian Relations in the Middle Ages by Jonathan Elukin

Mothers and Children JEWISH FAMILY LIFE IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE

Filisheva Baumgarten

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON AND OXFORD

Copyright © 2004 by Princeton University Press Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 3 Market Place, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, OX20 ISY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Second printing, and first paperback printing, 2007 Paperback ISBN-13: 978-0-69 1-1 3029-3 Paperback ISBN-10: 0-691-13029-9

The Library of Congress has cataloged the cloth edition of this book as follows Baumgarten, Elisheva. Mothers and children : Jewish family life in medieval Europe / Elisheva Baumgarten. p. cm.—(Jews, Christians, and Muslims from the ancient to the modern world) Rev. ed. of author’s thesis (Ph.D. —ha-Universitah ha-Ivrit bi-Yerushalayim, 2000) originally titled: Imahot vi-yeladim ba-hevrah ha-Yehudit bi-Yeme ha-Benayim.

Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-691-09166-8 (cl: alk. paper) 1. Childbirth— Religious aspects—Judaism. 2. Motherhood—Religious aspects—Judaism. 3. Judaism—Customs and practices. 4. Parent and child—Religious aspects—

Judaism. I. Title. II. Series. BM726.B3813 2004

306.874'3'08992404—dc22 2003066386 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available This book has been composed in Electra Printed on acid-free paper. press.princeton.edu Printed in the United States of America

3 5 79 10 8 6 4 2

For Yaacov, Yonatan, and Ayelet, with love

Blank Page

CONTENTS

Illustrations 1x Acknowledgments x1 Abbreviations xv INTRODUCTION | CHAPTER ONE. Birth 21 CHAPTER Two. Circumcision and Baptism 55 CHAPTER THREE. Additional Birth Rituals 92 CHAPTER Four. Maternal Nursing and Wet Nurses:

Feeding and Caring for Infants 119

Competing Values 154 CONCLUSIONS 184 CHAPTER FIvE. Parents and Children:

Notes 19] Glossary 24] Bibliography 243 Index 269

Blank Page

ILLUSTRATIONS

Ficure |. Circumcision and Baptism, Joshua in Gilgal 60

Ficure 2. Zipporah As Circumciser 66 FiGuRE 3. Isaac’s Circumcision

(Regensburg Pentateuch) 73

FicurE 4. Isaac’s Circumcision

(Verduner Alter of Nicholas of Verdun) 74

Ficures 5a and 5b. Hollekreisch 94,95

FicurE 6. “Von der Geburt” 103 FicurE 7. “Ceremonien in Kinds-Néthen und Kindbett” 104

Ficure 8. “Felicitas cum septem filiis” 179 Ficure 9. The Mother and Her Seven Sons 18]

Blank Page

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

My debts, institutional and personal, material and spiritual, are great. Financial support for the project came from a variety of institutions. The Nathan Rotenstreich Fellowship at the Hebrew University, the Memorial Foundation for Jewish Culture, and the American Association of University Women provided support for the first stages of this project and made possible the dissertation from which this book has grown. A postdoctoral grant from the Yad Hanadiv Rothschild Foundation as well as funding from the Braun Chair at Bar Ilan University allowed the revision and completion of this manuscript. My work would have been impossible without the help of librarians at the National Library, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, in the General Reading Room, the Hebrew Manuscript Institute, and especially in the Judaica Reading Room. I also thank the library at the Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, and especially Judith Leifer and Etty Lassman, for all of their help. My interest in the Jewish family and in medieval Ashkenaz began as a student in the Department of Jewish History at the Hebrew University. I wish to thank my teachers in the department and especially in the medieval section, for their encouragement and support over the years. Professor Robert Bonfill, my dissertation advisor, has been a model of superb scholarship and judicious criticism. His generous support and critique have accompanied all of my work, and words cannot express my debt to him. Other teachers and colleagues in Israel, first and foremost Avraham Grossman and Shulamith Shahar, accompanied this project from its inception, and I wish to express my deep thanks to them for their advice. Special thanks go to Robert Brody who read an early draft of the manuscript and saved me from many mistakes. I also benefited from the critique and suggestions of Gadi Algazi, Yoram Bilu, Harvey Goldberg, Mena-

hem Ben-Sasson, Ora Limor, and Israel ‘Ta-Shma and I thank them for their comments and advice. In addition, I wish to express gratitude to my colleagues at Bar Ilan in the Department of Jewish History and in the Gender Studies Program for their support and encouragement, and for making my transition into full-time teaching so comfortable. It is a pleasure to acknowledge my tremendous debt to two additional scholars. My thanks to Emanuel Sivan with whom I took my first steps in social history and gender studies and who has accompanied my work throughout the years. It was in his class, as a first-year student, that I first became acquainted with the work of Natalie Davis. I met with Natalie Davis in Jerusalem in the spring of 1998. Her helpful suggestions and assistance at that time and since

XH ACKNOWLEDGMENTS then are a continual source of encouragement and inspiration. I thank her for her generosity and constant support. Outside Israel, I have been blessed with supporting teachers and colleagues, and I owe a great deal to them as well. My greatest thanks goes to David Ruderman, who invited me to the University of Pennsylvania and generously pro-

vided ideal conditions for research and teaching both at the Center for Advanced Judaic Studies and on campus. His enthusiastic interest in and support of this project helped make its completion possible. The Alice Paul Center for Women and Gender Studies at the University of Pennsylvania provided me with a room of my own during the second year of my stay in Philadelphia, and [ thank Dana Barron, Demi Kurz, and Luz Marin for their generous hospitality and friendship during this period. The two years I spent in the United States allowed meetings with colleagues at a variety of institutions. Presentations of part of this book at Dartmouth, Yale, Columbia, Stanford, and the University of Pennsylvania during 2000/2001 allowed me to reexamine my ideas and re-

vise my thinking. Discussions with Caroline Bynum, E. Ann Matter, and Haym Soloveitchik during the time spent in the United States and afterward contributed to this book. A special thanks goes to Ivan Marcus whose advice and criticism have been a tremendous help and trom whom I have learned much. My fellow graduate students in Jerusalem and elsewhere have been critical readers as well as faithful partners for ongoing discussion in and out of the Judaica Reading Room. I thank Adam Shear, Aviad Hacohen, Daniella TalmonHeller, Dena Ordan, Ephraim Shoham-Steiner, Jennifer Harris, Kimmy Caplan and Richelle Budd Caplan, Nils Roemer, Oren Falk, Rami Reiner, Roni Weinstein, Sharon Koren, Yehuda Galinsky, Yochi Fisher-Yinon, and especially Ze’ev Elkin and Rachel Greenblatt for their help. My students at the Hebrew University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Bar [lan University have criticized my ideas and argued with me, helping me understand what it was I wanted to say, and I have learned much from them. Nevertheless, all mistakes remain mine alone. A special thanks to Brigitta van Rheinberg at Princeton University Press for her enthusiasm and support of this project, and to the editors of this series. I also wish to thank Deborah Tegarden and Alison Kalett, the production editors, for their infinite patience and for their continuous help through out the

period of our work together. The readers for the Press oftered helpful and thought-provoking comments on the manuscript and [ thank them for their criticism and suggestions. I also wish to acknowledge Jackie Feldman, a scholar

in his own right, who improved the manuscript and helped smooth the transition of my work from Hebrew into English. Chapter 2 of this book appears in a condensed form in the collection: Elizabeth Mark, (ed.). The Covenant of Circumcision: New Perspectives on an Ancient Jewish Ritual, 2003. Brandeis University Press; reprinted by permission, University Press of New England.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS X11 My parents, Al and Rita Baumgarten, helped in more ways than can be recalled —reading drafts of the manuscript, encouraging me, and providing ongoing support. I hope they will recognize some of what I have learned from them in what follows. My sisters, Shoshana, Margalit, and Naama, all took interest in this project and helped as well. Yaacov Deutsch has read this manuscript more times than he cares to remember, making suggestions, referring me to articles and sources, and discussing many of the issues explored here. He has been my most severe critic and greatest support, and this book would never have been completed without him. Words cannot express my gratitude for his

love and companionship over the years. It is to him and to our children, Yonatan and Ayelet, that I dedicate this book.

Blank Page

ABBREVIATIONS

AJS Review Association of Jewish Studies Review

CCCM Corpus Christianorum: Continuatio medievalis

EJ Encyclopedia Judaica HdA Handwéorterbuch des deutschen Aberglaubens, ed. Hans Bachtold-Staubli. Re-edited by Eduard Hoftmann-Krayer, Forward by Christoph Daxelmitiller, 10 vols.

(Berlin, 1927-41, repr. Berlin and New York, 1987)

JOR Jewish Quarterly Review

LdM Lexikon des Mittelalters, ed. Robert Auty, 8 vols. (Munich-Zurich, 1977-1993)

Mahzor Vitry Mahzor Vitry, ed. Simon haLevi Horowitz, (Niirnberg, 1892)

PL Patrologia, Series latina, ed. J. P. Migne

RE] Revue des études juives

Sefer Or Zaru’a R. Isaac b. Moses, Sefer Or Zaru’a, + parts, 2 vols., (Zhitomir, 1862)

Sefer Tosafot haShalem Sefer Tosafot haShalem: Commentary on the Bible, ed. Jacob Gellis, 10 vols. (Jerusalem

1982-95)

Semag R. Moses b. Jacob of Coucy. Sefer Mizvot haGadol, 2 vols. (Venice, 1547, repr. Jerusalem, 1961).

Semak R. Isaac b. Joseph of Corbeil. Sefer ‘Amudei Golah haNikra Semak (reprint Jerusalem, 1979).

SHB R. Judah b. Samuel Hasid, Sefer Hasidim, ed. Reuven Margaliyot (Jerusalem, 1957)

SHP Sefer Hasidim (Das Buch der Frommen),

ed. Judah Wistinetzki. (Frankfurt, 1924, 2d edition).

WCJS World Congress of Jewish Studies

XVI ABBREVIATIONS MEIR B BARUKH OF ROTHENBURG’S WRITINGS

She’elot uTeshuvot (Crimona) She’elot uTeshuvot, Crimona edition (repr. Jerusalem, 1986)

Shut Maharam (Prague) Sefer Shut Maharam b. Barukh, Prague edition, ed. Moses Arye Blakh (Budapest, 1895)

She’elot uTeshuvot (Lvov) She’elot uTeshuvot, ed. R. N. Rabinowitz (Lvov, 1860)

Mothers and Children

Blank Page

Introduction

IN HIS FIRST LETTER to Héloise, Abelard draws a sharp distinction between family life and the life of the philosopher': What harmony can there be between pupils and nursemaids, desks and cradles, books or tablets and distafts, pen or stylus and spindles? Who can concentrate on thoughts of scripture or philosophy and be able to endure babies crying, nurses soothing them with lullabies, and all the noisy coming and going of men and women about the house? Will he put up with the constant muddle and squalor that small children bring into the home??

The focus of this study is the cradles and the nurses and the noisy coming and going of men and women about the house . . . exactly that which Abelard intended to dismiss —the connection between these aspects of medieval life and the more accessible lives of scholars. This study follows the Jewish family in medieval Germany and northern France during the High Middle Ages, from the birth of a child until that child was ready for formal education.* An understanding of the family unit, the most basic building block of the medieval Jewish community, is essential in order to broaden our knowledge of Jewish family lite in the past and to comprehend the Jewish community. During the period of their lives examined here, children were under the supervision of their mothers and other women. The girls remained under this influence until they got married, whereas the boys left the female sphere sooner and began their formal religious education under the guidance of male tutors and teachers at the age of five, six, or seven. As mothers played a central role in their children’s existence during these years, this study has placed special emphasis on

their lives. It is, however, a book about both mothers and fathers, about their shared goals and their distinctive roles. Each aspect of Jewish life studied here is compared with that of the Christian surroundings. E:ach issue is evaluated not only in the context of Jewish society, but in that of European society as a whole. In some cases, these two separate groups are, in fact, one, for Jews and Christians lived in close proximity and, as neighbors, maintained daily contact with each other. In other cases, the inner structure of each society commands our attention, as the practices studied were conducted on distinctly parallel planes, with no direct contact between the two societies. By examining Jewish families along with Christian ones, we may identity shared social structures and mentalities, as well as differences.

y INTRODUCTION FAMILY HIsTORY AND GENDER STUDIES

Until recently, motherhood and childhood were considered subjects without history.* Many scholars of Jewish society, like those studying other societies, took for granted that the lives of mothers and children in the past were similar to those of their modern contemporaries,’ but in recent decades, social historians have revealed the great variety of cultural and social patterns that have characterized different societies, demonstrating the extent to which this assumption was incorrect. Among the first, prominent studies to examine these topics was research on the lives of medieval families; and to a great extent, interest in the topics of motherhood and childhood began with the examination of medieval European culture. Central to this investigation of family life in the past was Philippe Ariés’s book L’enfant et la vie familiale sous l'ancien régime.® This book generated a polemic that precipitated a new historical discourse. As Barbara Hanawalt has recently argued in her summary, and assessment of several decades of this debate, despite the refutation of many of Ariés’s arguments, his book is still central to all studies of childhood and family life.’ A central focus of the initial debates following the publication of Ariés’s book was his characterization of the emotional attachment of parents and, especially of mothers, to their children. Many of the conclusions attributed to Ariés in this context — such as the lack of parental love toward their children and especially the lack of grief over the death of children (as a consequence of high infant mortality) — became tundamental tenets of a school of research that sought to portray premodern parentchildren relationships as characterized by neglect and indifference.® While detailed research over the past three decades has persuasively argued that medieval parents were, in fact, emotionally attached to their children and has retuted many of the other claims made by Ariés and his followers, there is no doubt that his study was a central factor motivating much of the subsequent research. Important surveys and detailed studies written by Shulamith Shahar, Barbara Hanawalt, Pierre Riché, Danielle Alexandre-Bidon, Monique Closson, Didier Lett, James Schultz, and most recently Nicholas Orme among many others, have demonstrated the complexity of medieval childhood.’ While Ariés focused only on childhood, some of his followers and critics expanded the field of study to include questions dealing with parenting in the

past. Different models of parenthood and, especially of motherhood, were studied, giving rise to the awareness that being a mother or father in the past was not the same as parenthood today. While a small portion of this research was motivated by ideological purposes, particularly the work of radical feminists such as Elisabeth Badinter,!? most of this scholarship drew a new picture of a historical phenomenon that had received little attention in previous research.'! Book-length studies by historians such as Clarissa Atkinson and, more recently, Mary Dockray-Miller, as well as a number of authors of essays pub-

INTRODUCTION 3 lished in edited volumes on medieval motherhood, have examined attitudes toward motherhood and the medieval reality of mothers’ lives, while other scholars have studied birthing and infant feeding practices.” This study of motherhood was instigated by an additional set of interests as well. The feminist revolution revived interest in the lives of women in the past. At first, heroines were sought out and the actions of women in the public sphere were emphasized, and little attention was devoted to the lives of unexceptional women. Feminist scholars tended to ignore the private lives of women and their traditional functions—as mothers, wives, and daughters. Many feminist historians, like many other feminists during the 1970s and 1980s, saw a basic conflict between motherhood and feminism. Consequently, motherhood was one of the last topics to be addressed by feminist historians. !° When private life was studied, the questions investigated were usually limited to marriage and marriage practices. Fifteen years ago, the first book on motherhood in medieval Christian soci-

ety was published; since then, more have followed. Along with the study of motherhood and the lives of women, a new awareness has affirmed the necessity of examining the roles and understandings of men as fathers in the past.!* These studies of fathers are only beginning to be published, almost fifteen years atter the first appearance of studies on motherhood. While some of the studies of motherhood, particularly those popular two decades ago, addressed ques-

tions of emotional attachment, most recent studies have focused on understanding the historical context and culture of family life in the Middle Ages. Although much has been published on childhood and on the lives of women in the past, few studies have examined women and children together. The history of childhood has been adopted by social historians, as well as by scholars interested in psychoanalysis. The history of women has been examined by historians interested in the family, who have often studied the role of women as part of their discussion of marriage and of the division of labor in society. These scholars were interested in women as one of the components of the family, but often not as a topic in and of itself. By contrast, feminist research concerning the lives of women in the past adopted other methods of inquiry. In these studies, the interest was in women as a separate group, often portrayed as at odds with male hierarchies, resisting or submitting to them. Research that sought to outline an exclusively women’s “History of Their Own,” always included a chapter devoted to family life. These chapters were, however, often lopsided, presenting only women’s stories, while all but ignoring the men. Over the past two decades, women’s studies has shifted to include both genders, as scholars have realized that one cannot study women and their lives without examining men and their place in society. This shift has led to an inclusion of the lives of men and of society at large in the study of the lives of women. Feminists have demonstrated the extent of men’s presence, even when the main subject of their inquiry is women, thus reversing the attempts to iso-

4 INTRODUCTION late a separate female sphere. Such a female sphere was suggested both by more traditional historical writings, which allocated women a place only in the domestic sphere, as well as by feminist historians, who sought a point of entry into women’s lives in the past. A prominent example in this context is birth, an area that in premodern times, was supervised by women and took place exclusively in the presence of women. As, however, gender perspectives were introduced to research, this supposedly female sphere, like others, came to be seen as a reflection of the society in its entirety, rather than the world of women alone. In addition, not only is the constant inclusion of both men and women necessary for historical analysis, but as many of the sources studied, especially in the medieval period, were written by men, new methods had to be developed for examining these sources. Only so could scholars come to understand the perspective from which they were written and how that perspective presented the women mentioned in these sources. As noted over a decade ago by Christaine Klapisch-Zuber, the women presented in the medieval sources are often idealized; their descriptions are not of actual medieval persons. Consequently, we must take care to distinguish the sources referring to actual women and their deeds from sources referring to an ideal of womanhood, whether fair or wicked.!? In our case, in which the writers were all men, and generally wrote their observations about women for a male audience, these distinctions are of utmost importance. !° In summary, the study of motherhood and childhood, and the broader study of family lite share many characteristics. In both cases, historians today are studying topics that, a few decades ago, were not considered worthy of historical analysis. Scholars of family life have demonstrated time and again that, although biological functions such as birth and lactation, as well as the basic needs of infants and children, have not changed over time, the ways societies understand and satisty these needs has. One can no longer explain these needs or functions as simply “natural.” They must be understood within their specific cultural and historical contexts.!”

JEWS IN CHRISTIAN F,UROPE

The literature concerning the development of research on gender and family history is one part of the foundation for this study, providing a methodological basis for the research and a model for some of the questions posed in the pages that follow. As mentioned above, many of the scholars who pioneered the study of family lite in the past were also historians of medieval Europe. As a result, their work provides not only a methodological basis but a substantive one as well. This substantive foundation has been complemented by a growing number of studies concerning women and families in medieval Europe over the past decades. The Jewish communities examined in this study shared many as-

INTRODUCTION 5 pects of this well-documented world. The question of how to view Jewish society in light of this research and within the broader medieval context provides an additional foundation for this study. I will now briefly describe the Jewish communities of medieval Ashkenaz that are at the heart of this book. This study focuses on the Jewish family in medieval France and Germany during the High Middle Ages. The earliest sources examined are from the ninth century and the latest sources are from the early modern period. The bulk of the source material was, however, written in the High Middle Ages, between the time of the First Crusade and the Black Death. Since changes in the family often evolved over time, the long period of time examined allows for an assessment of the variation in society that took place over the years. A time framework similar to the one generally employed in studies of medieval northern France and Germany was chosen for two reasons. As is the case in Christian Europe, the Jewish sources from before the eleventh century are relatively sparse. Despite this relative dearth, the ninth and tenth centuries were formative periods both for the Jewish communities and for their Christian neighbors and institutions. The relative wealth of sources from the late eleventh century onward reflects the vitality of the lives of the Jews of Ashkenaz. This situation parallels that of the Christian world, where we find a wealth of sources from the twelfth century on,!° as many scholars of childhood and family life in the Middle Ages have pointed out.!? The early materials from the Carolingian

period are very valuable, however, as they reflect a period in which changes that shaped the institutions of the High Middle Ages were initiated. This 1s equally true of the scarce but important documents we have of community agreements and halakhic opinions from the ninth and tenth centuries.*° The terminus ad quem of this study, the mid-fourteenth century, also has shared significance for Jewish and Christian society. The Black Death has been shown to be a turning point in many different contexts, an event that provoked extreme changes in both attitudes and practices. While in some cases, these changes reflect processes that began in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, many became prominent only after the Black Death. Consequently, many studies about family life in medieval Europe end with the Black Death, just as many studies concerned with early modern Europe begin their inquiry at this point.*? The Black Death was also a moment of change for the Jewish communities in Europe and, as such, serves as a suitable period for the end of our inquiry. The Black Death changed the face of European Jewry. Following the Black Death, the process of expulsion of Jews that had begun in England at the end of the thirteenth century, and continued in France at the beginning of the fourteenth century, spread to some cities in Germany as well.** In addition, many Jews in German communities began to move to Poland during this period. As the population moved eastward, the result of these migrations, both forced and voluntary, created a new Jewish geography.** My examination of sources from after the Black Death demonstrates some of the effects of those

6 INTRODUCTION changes and investigates to what extent changes that began earlier were accentuated, continued, or transformed after the mid—fourteenth century. The communities examined are situated in today’s northern France and Germany, and are generally called “Ashkenaz” in Jewish historical writing. Although these areas did not belong to a single geopolitical entity during the Middle Ages, and Jewish sources themselves reflect some differences between the localities, the corpus of sources that provides the basis for this study is, for the most part, shared by the two communities.** Jews settled along the banks of the Rhine during the ninth and tenth centuries, in cities that over time became central Jewish establishments. The “Shum” communities — Speyer, Worms, and Mainz — were home to many important rabbinical figures as well as to the

financial leaders of the time (the two vocations often went hand in hand).?? Additional German communities were home to rabbinic authorities and successful traders as well. Over time, Jewish settlement spread eastward, and new centers of business and learning were established.*° The Jews of northern France, like their brothers and sisters in Germany, were also a vital part of the urbanization of Europe during the Carolingian era.*’ Jewish families established themselves along the trade routes and in the large urban centers. By the High Middle Ages, larger communities, numbering several hundred families, lived in the big cities in France, while many smaller Jewish communities were established, some numbering only a handful of families. The Jews of these communities in France and Germany maintained close contact with other Jews who shared their customs — Jews living in Bohemia, Austria, and Italy

(where many of the Ashkenazic Jews originated).*° Some sources from these areas will be examined here as well.*? I have not included the Jews of England in this discussion, since the Hebrew sources from England are of a different nature from those on the continent, and, despite the existing contacts between Jews in England and in Ashkenaz, the communities’ traditions are not the same. My decision to jointly examine the areas that are today part of Germany and northern France, distinguishing between them only when such distinctions arise trom the sources, does not ignore the fact that these were separate geographic units with distinctive sociopolitical features. Some sources demonstrate that the medieval Jews themselves were well aware of such distinctions. Historians have dittered over the importance of these distinctions. While some have argued for examining the two traditions jointly, others have argued for distinguishing between the Jews of northern France and those of Germany.’? My approach assumes that the customs and practices in both areas were, for the most part, shared.*! Scholars who went to study in the yeshivas frequently traveled between France and Germany, as did many of the business people. In the tenth and eleventh centuries, students often traveled from France to Germany, and in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, German students often traveled to France to study. As we shall see, in the context of family life, both areas shared many features and, in fact, can be defined as a single broad region.

INTRODUCTION 7 In short, the geographical and chronological frameworks examined here accord with those commonly employed when studying Christian society. As was the case in some of the first studies that examined family lite, as well as women’s history in medieval Europe, the geographic scope of our project is rather broad. As in those projects, I have focused on northern Europe, to the exclusion of the southern parts of Europe — Spain and Provence.** This division suits the study of Jewish society, as Spain and Provence had legal and philosophical traditions different from those of Ashkenazic Jews, while Muslim rule, under which the Jews had lived in previous centuries, gave rise to substantial ditterences in religious customs as well as legal traditions. Over the past two decades, Christian family lite and gender divisions in medieval society have been studied extensively. In the course of this period, there has been a gradual shitt from studies examining longer time frames and larger

geographic areas to research with narrower geographic and chronological foci.** One can hope and assume that, as more social and cultural research pertaining to the Jews in medieval Ashkenaz is undertaken and published, our ability to distinguish between communities and localities will improve. Jewish Life in Medieval Europe

As stated at the outset, the premise of this study is that it is impossible to comprehend the history of medieval Jews without an in-depth understanding of the society in which they lived. This premise has been debated and contested since the earliest studies on Ashkenazic Jewry written by Wissenschaft scholars in the nineteenth century. Certainly, the Jews formed a distinct social and religious group that saw itself, and was perceived by others, as separate from its surroundings. Moreover, the medieval Jewish communities, as well as their Christian neighbors, strove to create separate and even opposing identities, cultivating their own unique customs, some of which were designed to set Jews apart from Christians. Some of these distinctions, within the family framework, will be examined below. At the same time, however, within the medieval cities, the Jews in Germany and northern France were in contact with their Christian neighbors on a daily basis and had to deal with many of the same mundane worries and troubles. Clearly, on the most basic level, the everyday needs of a Jewish family were similar to those of their Christian neighbors. The Jews needed to support themselves financially, as did their neighbors, and they too married, gave birth, and died. In the context of family life, giving birth, and raising children, we can assume that Jews and Christians who lived in similar material surroundings and environments shared many of the same concerns. ‘This similarity is aptly illustrated by medieval accounts of medical techniques and beliefs related to child care, as well as other categories of medical care.** Aside from daily concerns, Jews and their neighbors shared a common lan-

8 INTRODUCTION guage — the local vernaculars in which they conducted their everyday business and family life.*? They also shared many beliefs, values, and principles, in spite of their separate and, at times, conflicting religions. These shared values are expressed through the shaping of their respective rites of passage and their social institutions, as well as through shared outlooks on life.*° While these similar worldviews sometimes led to intense interfaith polemics, they were also the foundation upon which those polemics were built.*’ As such, it is important to outline the similarities as well as the differences between Jewish and Christian family lives.

These shared approaches and attitudes derived not only from common living conditions and beliets, but also trom daily contact. Medieval sources provide many examples of everyday contact between Jews and Christians, especially between Jewish and Christian women, including trade and daily neigh-

borly life. Through these connections, Jews and Christians became familiar with one another’s customs. On the family level, Christian women lived inside Jewish homes as servants and as wet nurses, sharing many aspects of the family’s daily routine.*° This certainly provided opportunities for exchanging opinions and beliefs. Christian women who worked for Jews learned about Jewish

customs and taught Jews their own practices. These more intimate contacts between Jews and Christians are central to this study.

One might argue that since these Jewish-Christian contacts took place within a very clear framework in which Jews were masters and mistresses and Christian women at their beck and call, such contacts are of limited value in illustrating shared worlds. These contacts were, however, so commonplace, that they must be taken into account as part of any attempt to understand medieval Jewish life. As we shall see, many Jewish families, including very poor ones, had Christian servants and wet nurses. In addition, in spite of the very clear hierarchy within the Jewish home, the relationships between the Jewish

masters and their servants were shadowed by a reverse hierarchy in which Christians had the upper hand over the Jews. Contact with household servants was only one of the many facets of daily Jewish-Christian relationships. During the medieval period, there were no ghettos, and Jews and Christians were neighbors. Despite the clear preference Jewish community members showed for living in close proximity to one another, they almost always had Christian neighbors as well.*? These shared neighborhoods created many points of meeting and contact: Jewish and Christian women shared ovens, Jews and Christians met by the local wells and cisterns, borrowed food, and knew each other’s daily routines. Medieval responsa indicate that Jewish and Christian women borrowed dresses from one another and were familiar with intimate details of one another’s customs.*? To these informal connections, we may add commercial contacts between Jews and Christians.*! Certainly, a Christian man or woman who came to the home of a Jewish moneylender was witness to various aspects of Jewish life. Likewise, Jews

INTRODUCTION 9 became aware of aspects of Christian lite by receiving securities that had specitically religious connotations, or when business or other contacts required them to become familiar with the Christian ritual calendar. As Cohen and Horowitz

have suggested, members of coterminous different cultures were probably more familiar with one another’s rituals than with their respective ideologies. Our focus will be on the more intimate and domestic contacts between Jews and Christians, especially those between women. The presence of Christian women in Jewish homes, as well as the shared world of medical practitioners and practice, are both central to understanding medieval Jewish family lite. Medical practice is a central component of birth and child care. Jews and Christians exchanged knowledge and techniques and, in some cases, practitioners as well. In addition, medieval medicine had strong religious components — the relics and amulets used, the verses chanted and the explanations given for different practices were often based on religious texts and interpretations.*? In spite of the many contacts between Jews and Christians, the Jewish community, as noted at the outset, saw itself and was seen by others as a separate entity. In many of the cases examined here, Jewish and Christian society will be compared, and I will point to parallel practices and developments as well as to central differences between Jewish and Christian practice. Many scholars have debated how ideas were transferred from one society to the other, especially in cases in which we cannot attribute shared outlooks and practices to daily contacts alone. When scholars of the nineteenth century identified parallel customs, they were often most interested in tracing the origin of the practice to either a Jewish or a Christian source, rather than explaining the culture and period in which the two parallel practices existed.*+ As my main interest is in the lives of medieval Jews and Christians in their cultural context, I will not be concerned with tracing practices back to their alleged point of origin in Judaism or Christianity. My assumption is that Jews, as a minority society, were more influenced by their Christian neighbors, than the Christians, as a majority culture, were influenced by the Jews. Jews absorbed and appropriated some of the ideas and values of their social environment, more often than not unconsciously. [van Marcus has called this kind of cultural appropriation “inward acculturation,” as it did not lead to Jews’ joining Christianity and giving up aspects of their Judaism; rather, it involved the absorption of new ideas into Jewish society.? This approach presents a change from that adopted by past historians. It allows a departure from the attempt to portray Jews as living in a world separate from that of their Christian neighbors. This method also emphasizes that Jews belong to European culture. As Robert Bonfil has shown, this approach also raises new questions: If the Jews are indeed part of their surrounding society, then their lives must be studied in light of their environment. To acertain extent, this method, which has been developed in different ways by a number of scholars recently,*© was already examined and discussed by his-

10 INTRODUCTION torians of medieval Ashkenaz in the nineteenth century. However, an additional dominant emphasis in many of those studies was the history of persecution that was a central component of medieval Jewish life.” This emphasis also underlined the difference between the unpleasant contact of Jews with their Christian surroundings, and the religious and creative spirituality enjoyed by leaders of the Ashkenazic communities. As a result, subsequent scholarly approaches usually restricted their gaze to the world of scholarship, positing an unfriendly world beyond the spiritual environment. Family life, according to this approach, was an internal aspect of Jewish life because it was regulated by the ‘Torah and by the leaders of the Ashkenazic communities. With few exceptions, it was presented as a world apart, not connected to the daily contact that existed between Jews and Christians. The social, rather than the religious or intellectual history of the Jews, was the subject of a number of studies in nineteenth-century Germany and England, but was first brought to the forefront of research through the writings of Salo Baron and Jacob Katz. Baron’s approach, which held sway in the twentieth century, especially in North America, concentrated on the social history of the Jews and refused to see the Middle Ages only as a period of persecution. Yet despite the tremendous scope of Baron’s research, he did not devote attention to Jewish family life.*° Another prominent social historian, Jacob Katz, devoted his attention to the family in medieval and early modern times. Katz’s analysis, however, was based on a sociological prototype, and he was not interested in understanding the daily life of the family or the place of women and children within the family framework.1? Well before Baron and Katz, scholars of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries such as Moritz Giidemann, Israel Abrahams, and others were interested in cultural history, and the Jewish family had a prominent place in

their work. On the whole, these scholars, many of whom lived in Germany, were interested in situating Jewish history, and specifically medieval European Jewish history, within the context of the dominant Christian culture.?? They pointed to many parallels and shared features of Jewish and Christian life, while maintaining the position that, even in cases in which practices were shared, an inherent difference existed between the Jews and their neighbors. While aspects of family life were examined within the Christian context, an underlying assumption was that the Jewish family was a special haven from the rough, and at times anti-Jewish and unkind world Jews inhabited.”! After World War II, and especially with the establishment of the State of Israel, medieval Jewish lite in Europe attracted much interest. In these studies,

the self-organization of the medieval Jewish communities became a central topic. The family, however, the basic building block of these communities, received little attention.’* The lack of attention to family history, as well as to the place of women and children in medieval Jewish society, was not merely a reflection of the interests of historians who studied Jewish culture. It also re-

INTRODUCTION I] flected the foci of historical research generally during these years; family history and gender studies were not yet prominent in medieval studies. Jewish historical research turned to the family and gender studies only several years after this trend was initiated in general studies of the medieval world in the late eighties and early nineties of the twentieth century. ”’

In addition to the interest in medieval Jewish community life, the past decades of medieval research have followed the more traditional study of the history of Jewish thought — the works and lives of the great rabbinical figures, whose writings also provide most of the evidence for this study.°+ Many studies on Jewish-Christian relations were also published.’? Only recently have scholars attempted to illuminate the social settings in which these intellectual pursuits took place and connect between these two topics, by examining the works and lives of rabbinic scholars in the context of Jewish-Christian relations. These new emphases in research follow many years in which scholars assumed that Jewish intellectuals functioned in a rather rarehed and isolated intellectual environment.© The tendency, prevalent until quite recently, to examine Jewish life in medieval Ashkenaz in isolation from the lives of non-Jewish neighbors contrasts with research on the Jews of medieval Spain, which has emphasized the shared features and joint culture of Jews, Muslims, and Christians.’’ There are a number of reasons for this difference: First and foremost, the focus of most scholars studying medieval Ashkenaz was the halakhic corpus composed by scholars during the Middle Ages. These sources are mainly in Hebrew and were not written in order to describe social conditions or situations; rather, they focus on legal and exegetical topics. Scholars’ major interest has been in the authors and their intellectual creativity, in the rabbis, and in the contact between them. Their wives, children, and unlearned neighbors were of little concern. Thus, family life was disregarded. An apt illustration of this point can be found in the information we possess regarding the families of the sages themselves. Only a small number of their wives are known by name, and, even in those cases, little else is known about them.”® A second reason for the tendency to examine internal Jewish communal lite in relative isolation has to do with the extant sources. Most of the sources examined in the past, as in this study, are traditional Jewish sources written in Hebrew. These sources are religious writings focused on the interpretation of Holy Scripture and other canonical texts. As such, they seem to invite examination from an internal Jewish perspective. The second focus of research — Jewish-Christian relations —also promoted separate examination of religious traditions. The discussion of Jewish-Christian polemics assumed ditterence, for if there is no ditterence, there is no argument. Despite recent tendencies to concentrate on the dialogue between Judaism and Christianity, the main focus of scholarship in this area has been on the presentation of the differences between Jews and Christians, rather than on their shared aspects.?”

12 INTRODUCTION With the growing interest in the lives of women in the past, this too has been changing. One of the most important works reflecting this outlook is that of

Avraham Grossman, a prominent scholar of sages’ lives who has recently turned his attention to the history of medieval Jewish women and, especially, to issues relating to marriage and family.°? Grossman has emphasized the more

ancient elements of Jewish tradition, which are important for any attempt to understand medieval Jewish texts, along with comparing Jewish practices to those of their Christian and Muslim neighbors. However, although Grossman does compare Jewish and Christian society in his work, both societies remain distinctive entities, and his comparisons, unlike those of some scholars of Span-

ish Jewry, single out parallels, rather than describe shared mentalities and frameworks. A third possible reason for this attitude toward Ashkenazic Jewry lies in the

events that have been emphasized in the history of the Middle Ages: the persecutions and expulsions the Jews experienced in Ashkenaz and beyond. From the eleventh century onward, we find many accounts of these persecutions as well as of the rise of accusations such as host-desecration accusations and blood libels.°! The tremendous impact of these events, as reflected in research, led to a growing perception of medieval Ashkenazic Jewry as a community living in hostile surroundings. Many of the earlier studies that examined JewishChristian relations also emphasized the antagonism that existed between Jews and Christians in medieval society. Recent research, however, has sought to reexamine these relationships, and, while scholars do not deny the existence of this hostility, they have also emphasized the shared facets of Jewish and Christian practice and belief.° This study is based on the premise that, although Jews and Christians belonged to two distinct religious groups, they lived in the same time and place and often shared many aspects of their lives, despite hostilities that existed between them. Furthermore, these features were not only common to both religious groups, but were also part of a shared dialogue. Thus, medieval Jews and Christians must be studied both as part of a larger joint society and as members of independent religious societies. In some cases we will witness shared practices and frameworks, while in others, the separate structures will be salient. As such, the comparison between Jews and Christians in the pages that follow will serve to identify cases in which the similarities between both societies were overwhelming. There, we may speak of a single framework of medieval life. In other instances, where we will be struck by the distinct differences between Jews and Christians, we will inquire as to whether this diversity resulted from religious differences or from some other cause.°° This comparison also serves another, albeit secondary purpose. As mentioned, there is a substantial body of research about family life in medieval Christian Europe. In some cases where the Jewish sources were lacking in certain details, but the known features indicated great similarity between Jewish

INTRODUCTION 13 and Christian practices, I have used this knowledge to help fill in the missing details. The dangers of such practice are obvious, since, in such cases, Christian society serves as both a comparison and a parallel. I believe, however, that the benefits of this method, when exercised cautiously, outweigh the dangers. In order to monitor the conclusions of such comparisons, I also make reference to some Jewish practices in other diasporas, beyond Ashkenaz. Although social research is still lacking for the Jews of Muslim lands and for the Jews of Spain, Goitein’s monumental Mediterranean Society as well as work on Provence, Spain, and Italy have served as controls.°* The methods employed here seek to identity parallels, joint practices, and shared beliefs. Due to the nature of the sources, however, this methodology meets with a central difficulty that must be noted at the outset. While we may isolate parallels and shared traditions and actions, it is rarely possible to reconstruct chains of causation and proof or processes of contact, dissemination, and exchange. I would like to emphasize that this is not the purpose of this study, and that, in this respect, it differs from previous research, especially nineteenthcentury Wissenschaft studies, which focused on the question of who influenced whom and how. Rather, as I suggest explicitly in the book, I believe that Jews and Christians living in medieval Ashkenaz were part of the same cultural surroundings and shared a store of ideas, values, and beliefs. In some cases, these shared values were expressed in similar ways, while in other cases, due to religious and social differences (for example the fact that Jews were part of a minority culture, while Christians were not), they were expressed ditterently. The nature of the topics examined in this book might lead some to dismiss many of the resemblances I discuss as arising merely from “common sense.” After all, they might argue, children all over the world have the same basic needs, and parents caring for these children experience similar processes and share similar obligations. ‘To use just one example examined here, that of birth, one could argue that throughout history, the biological process of birth has not changed, and that this explains the sharing of medical practices among Jews and Christians in medieval Europe. However, as noted, scholars of gender and of the history of childhood have shown that these biological processes take on diverse cultural significance in different cultures. Moreover, medieval medicine contained many elements that were closely tied to religious ideas and concepts and hence, cannot be treated as a value-neutral category. Also, as | demonstrate in chapter 1, procreation and celibacy have been at the heart of the JewishChristian debate since ancient times. Therefore, we cannot simply assume that Christian and Jewish practices surrounding procreation, fertility, and childbirth will “naturally” resemble one another. Rather, it is important to demonstrate the similarities between them as well as the differences. The other chapters of the book support this conclusion. In them I show that ceremonies and educational processes that have been presented in other studies as exclusively Jewish or exclusively Christian are actually based on shared social structures and values.

14 INTRODUCTION PARENTS AND CHILDREN IN MEDIEVAL ASHKENAZ

Fifteen years ago, Louise Tilly and Miriam Cohen drew attention to the fact that family history and gender studies have rarely been researched jointly.© While there has been some change over the years, as gender became a more prominent category of analysis, most studies of both medieval Jewish and Christian society have chosen to focus either on mothers or on children, but not on both. This book examines both parents and children, with special emphasis on mothers and motherhood. In this way, I intend to situate the medieval Jewish family within its wider framework, both in relation to fathers and the broader context of Jewish society, while devoting special attention to medieval Jewish women, who have become subjects of historical inquiry only recently. The joint examination of motherhood and family life enables us to challenge preconceptions concerning both Jewish society in particular and medieval society in general. By examining parenting practices and attitudes toward infants and children, we become acquainted with material and social aspects of everyday life in the Middle Ages and increase our knowledge of the religious beliefs and values of the period. In medieval society, as in many premodern societies, women were seen as responsible for children’s welfare during their early years. This fundamental social situation gave rise to shared needs among Jewish and Christian families. At the same time, religious beliefs and values are other factors that shaped cultural attitudes and practices. In the case of medieval Jewish and Christian society, I explore the extent to which rellgious ditterence led to distinct practices, and I attempt to outline the areas in which religion made a difference. The History of Childhood and Women’s and Gender Studies in Medieval Jewish Culture

Just as much of the literature concerning childhood in medieval Christian society was grounded in the Ariés controversy, so too, studies of childhood in medieval Jewish society have taken Ariés as their point of departure. Three studies of medieval Jewish attitudes toward children have been written to date. Simha Goldin has examined the history of medieval Jewish childhood, comparing Jewish and Christian society. Israel Ta-Shma examined attitudes to children in Sefer Hasidim and argued for ditferences between Jewish and Christian society over many issues.°° Another scholar who has devoted his attention to attitudes toward children and, especially, to education is Ephraim Kanartogel.°’ These studies, accepting the theories of Ariés and his followers concerning medieval childhood, assumed that Christian parents did not love their children and were not saddened by their deaths. These scholars suggested that in Jewish society, by contrast, the situation was better.°® Although they acknowledged that some of Ariés’s conclusions did apply to the Jewish commu-

INTRODUCTION 15 nity — for example, the idea that childhood was a more poorly demarcated period of life and that the lack of distinguishing terms for concepts of childhood attests to this fact.” They argued that Jews, unlike Christians, loved and cared for their families. This argument was made without acknowledging the vast body of literature written on precisely this topic over the past three decades. The idea that Jews were somehow better than their Christian neighbors can be found in the many studies in the nineteenth century that compare Jews and Christians in medieval society. Even those nineteenth-century scholars who pointed to the many similarities between Jewish and Christian practices proclaimed the superiority of Jews over their neighbors. For example, Israel Abrahams noted: “In most of these particulars, I can hardly think that the life of the Jewish child dittered trom that of his gentile brother. But the Jewish view of domesticity showed itself in the success with which life was made lovable to the child notwithstanding the rigours of the discipline to which he was subjected.” Throughout his book, he emphasizes time and again: “The home was the place where the Jew was at his best.”’° The study of childhood is but one component of the transformation the study of Jewish history has undergone over the past two decades. Social history and, more specifically, gender studies have now become a central area of study. However, this change in methodology and subject matter followed the path of its precedents in non-Jewish Western historical research. Some studies have examined Jewish marriage practices, while others have analyzed men’s attitudes toward women or women’s history in the public sphere, as teachers and educators of women. Few studies have examined motherhood or have sought to place women within a broader context of family and community.’! Furthermore, much of the work on Jewish women in the past has emphasized our inability to recover their voices, as well as the misogynic attitudes toward women in ancient sources.’* These studies, many of them written in the wake of current ideological debates, either sought to demonstrate the oppression of women in Judaism or were written in a more apologetic vein and wished to prove the opposite. In addition, when comparing Jewish and Christian women’s lives, some scholars have emphasized the superiority of one culture over another, just as we found in the discussion of childhood. They often emphasized how much better attitudes were toward women in Jewish society, and the superior rights they enjoyed, or emphasized that negative attitudes toward women in Judaism were the result of non-Jewish influence. It is our contention that this type of analysis is not productive, as it often tends to apologetics rather than historical examination. Any attempt at determining which society was better or worse leads to value judgments based on principles that are anchored in modern life and are of limited value in understanding the past.’* Although it is easy to slip unconsciously into such comparison,’* I have tried to circumvent such discussions by avoiding labeling practices when discussing medieval Jewish society.’” [ have tried to distance myself from both the apologetic and the triumphal-

16 INTRODUCTION ist (ethnocentric) positions. I have taken as a given that medieval Jewish society, like all of medieval society, was patriarchal, and that its communities were governed by male hierarchies. My purpose has been to explore the fabric of this society and examine the social ideologies, hierarchies, and practices that characterized it. Where possible, I have also explored our capacity to accurately recover the actual women’s voices through the testimonies provided by male writers. These voices are frequently found in descriptions of conflicts or arguments over various practices. In addition to the aspiration to provide a fuller picture of motherhood, fatherhood, and family lite, two other issues are central to this study. ‘The first is the examination of birth rituals and the understanding of ritual frameworks regulating birth for parents and children in medieval Ashkenaz. The second is the examination of the daily contacts between Jews and Christians in the sphere of family life. The study of ritual has become a central tool for historical analysis over the past years. Jews and Christians in the Middle Ages, as in most societies, celebrated birth, marriage, and death with elaborate ritual. As scholars have shown, examining these rituals offers new insights into the place of individuals in their societies, as well as the social settings and religious ideologies that framed these rituals.’° Over the past years, ritual theory has been used extensively to understand different aspects of medieval Christianity,’’ and the beginnings of such an approach can be seen in Jewish studies over the past decade.’® In the medieval context, the rite of passage that marked the beginning of boys’ education, as studied by Ivan Marcus, is the most notable example of such research on medieval Ashkenaz.’” Few studies, however, have studied the social aspects of rituals, and most have focused exclusively on the religious symbolism that was part of the ritual in question.°? Moreover, only circumcision has been studied extensively, despite the fact that other, less formal rituals existed as well. The issue of daily contacts between Jews and Christians has been studied in the economic sphere and, most recently, in the context of Hebrew Bible and New Testament exegesis and the connections between Jewish and Christian

scholars. Our focus is on the more mundane contacts, especially between women inside and outside the house. Wet nursing and midwitery, as well as advice shared between women about health and child care are all part of these contacts. By demonstrating these close contacts between Jewish and Christian women, and the world shared by both groups, we hope to open up new vistas for research. The evidence pointing to a world shared by Jewish and Christian women encourages historians of both Jewish and Christian society to search for and learn from comparisons between them. In that way, at times by filling in the blanks, we can piece together a fuller picture of the knowledge women shared in medieval society, as well as a sketch of a central channel through which Jews and Christians, both men and women, learned and adopted ideas that became part of Jewish and Christian life alike.

INTRODUCTION 17 ‘THE SOURCES

The sources that provide the basis for this study are varied and were, for the most part, written in northern France and Germany during the High Middle Ages. They include halakhic responsa (questions and answers addressed to prominent rabbinical authorities), exempla such as those in Sefer Hasidim, ritual books, comprehensive books of commandments (sifrei mizvot), biblical and talmudic commentary as well as commentary on liturgical poetry (piyutim), medical tractates, polemical compositions, chronicles, lists of the dead, and gravestones. In addition to sources originating in the Jewish communities, canon law, municipal records, medical texts, commentaries on the Bible (Old and New Testament) and legenda provide knowledge about the Jewish communities, their Christian surroundings, and the contacts between Jews and Christians. Some of the Hebrew sources are found in printed editions that have been published extensively since the mid-nineteenth century. Other sources remain in unpublished manuscripts. The majority of these sources were not written with the intention of discussing family life; rather they address a variety of concerns, both legal and theological, and the details about family life emerge from the narrative. Sefer Hasidim provides unique information about parent-children relations and about attitudes toward children and family life. Scholarship about this book has debated the nature of the group that adhered to the instructions of Sefer Hasidim and constituted the audience of the book. While some have suggested seeing Hasidei Ashkenaz as a unique and separate group, others have suggested that many of the moral lessons recommended in the book pertained to all of Ashkenazic society.°! While I do not intend to discuss this issue in the book, I propose reading many of the stories concerning women, children, and family life as representative of Ashkenazic society as a whole.®* Even if Hasidei Ashkenaz were as small and sectarian a group as some have suggested, this does

not mean their family life was completely ditterent from that of their Jewish neighbors. As a way of checking these conclusions, I have sought to compare between attitudes expressed in Sefer Hasidim and those expressed in other contemporary Jewish and Christian sources in order to determine how normative these ideas were. Working with the sources described above involves a number of difficulties, both technical and more substantive. As I stated above, these texts were all written by and for men. This perspective poses ditficulties for the evaluation of the opinions and attitudes of women cited in these writings. Unlike many of the parallel Christian sources, the men writing these texts had families and were not removed from family life. Despite this, one cannot forget that their readers were only men. I have tried to demonstrate how, in some cases, one can discuss women’s attitudes and opinions in spite of these limitations. This dithculty is compounded by the fact that most of the sources were not meant to dis-

Is INTRODUCTION cuss the family. Consequently, the evidence in the sources must be examined both in its context and in a broader perspective. ‘The attempt to combine information from sources belonging to different literary genres requires that we be cognizant of the rules of each genre when piecing the sources together. Most of the sources examined here have been discussed in previous literature by scholars who specialized in medieval Ashkenaz. In the tradition of gender studies, | have examined these sources in new ways, posing different questions. It is also crucial to note the sources we are lacking. Besides the obvious fact that we have not a single source written by a woman, we also have no sources providing demographic or statistical information,®* nor do we have maps or city plans to provide us with a layout of the cities in which Jews lived. We also have no Jewish parallel to the medieval hagiographic sources that describe the saints’ lives — sources that have been used extensively to study family life in medieval Christendom.**

While I have used a variety of sources in comparing Jewish and Christian society, my most basic resource for Christian society has been the extensive research on medieval women, men, and children. In some cases, | have based my comparison on these secondary sources, while in other cases I have returned to the medieval sources themselves. As the main focus of this study is Jewish society, most of the sources are Jewish sources.

FAMILY LIFE IN MEDIEVAL ASHKENAZ

In the chapters that follow, the narrative begins with pregnancy and ends with boys’ entry into formal education, at age six or seven. This narrative was chosen because it enabled a combined analysis and discussion of several kinds of sources. This is necessary, since one type of source may provide a wealth of information on one topic, but none on others. For example, a huge body of legal literature discusses common breast-feeding practices. By contrast, there are almost no legal writings on birth. While we can find a wealth of information about the process from birth until early childhood, the lack of demographic and statistical information prevents us from outlining other basic information about the family and its characteristics. | have relied on the suggestions made by others on the composition and character of medieval Jewish families as well as their living conditions. The following summary will provide an overview of the research I have utilized for the study. Living conditions are especially important because young children — boys who had not yet begun school (at the local synagogue or their tutor’s home) and young girls —spent most of their time at home. When they went out of their homes, young children were usually accompanied by adults. Since we know that these children’s mothers were mobile and could be seen in many public spaces —around the home, at synagogue, as well as in the streets and

INTRODUCTION 19 marketplace — we can assume that they often took their young children with them, even if there is little evidence of such outings. There is substantial evidence, however, of their visits to the synagogue. These visits began long before they were ripe for education and attended the synagogue to study with the local tutor.®° Both young boys and girls attended the synagogue with their parents. The synagogue was a central communal meeting place for social and spiritual functions. Archeological evidence reflects the tremendous importance the Jewish communities attributed to their communal places of worship — both as an antithesis to the local churches and as a sanctuary.*° Over the past years, a wealth of research has been published on the locations of medieval Jews habitations. These studies are, for the most part, the result of research done in Germany, where scholars have been interested in understanding the development and settlement of Jews in Germany during the Middle Ages.°” Few of these studies have, however, examined the lifestyles and living conditions of individual families within the city. Fifty years ago Alexander Pinthus raised some of these questions in his study Die Judensiedlungen der Deutsche Stddte. Eine stadtbiologische Studie, and little has been done in this direction since.°®

In contrast to the lack of sources on Jewish living conditions, we know that the Jews’ Christian neighbors lived as nuclear families, and that each couple usually had a room of their own and formed an independent economic unit.®” These units were often tied to broader family frameworks in their daily life, but they almost always lived independently.” With the exception of studies concerning the age of marriage and especially child brides,”! little research has been done on Jewish family structures.”* Kenneth Stow is one of the few scholars who has addressed this topic, and he has argued that the Jews, like their urban Christian neighbors, lived in nuclear families.”* The medieval Jewish sources, also, point to the complex networks that existed between and within families, especially insofar as economic relationships and partnerships were concerned.”* Sources that discuss economics and business deals may potentially shed additional light on family structures, since so much of Jewish business took place within the home. As we shall see in the following chapters, especially regarding rituals, the wider family framework was also central in religious and social lite. Family background was an essential component in matchmaking agreements and was a central factor in determining social status.”” Few sources, however, discuss the involvement of grandparents in the upbringing and education of their grandchildren. Consequently, we cannot outline the nuclear family’s relationship with broader family networks in the context of early childhood. While we can assume that grandparents and siblings were involved in the upbringing of children, especially in cases in which a young bride gave birth, there are few details on these relationships.”° These issues all require further research, research that was not undertaken in the context of this study.

20 INTRODUCTION The first chapter traces family life from marriage and the period betore conception, to birth and practices surrounding birth, including attitudes toward

procreation and the preference for boys over girls. The social organization around birth, the work of midwives, the connections between Jewish and Christian women, as well as the gendered conceptions of birth are all addressed in this chapter. The second and third chapters discuss birth rituals — the more institutionalized rite of circumcision, as well as the less formal rites for girls, boys, and women after birth. This discussion outlines the understandings of the rites in both individual and more communal terms. The place of women in these rites, and the changes in the rituals over time are central to the discussion. From the ritual framework, I turn to examine daily practices and attitudes toward children and child care. Chapter 4 discusses breast-feeding and wet-nursing practices and exposes a complex world of interactions between Jews and Christians. Chapter 5, the final chapter, discusses attitudes toward children and child care, from the division of labor to the place of child

care in religious and ethical thought. All the chapters compare Jewish and Christian sources and practices. In the conclusion, I summarize the insights that arise from this examination of Jewish society within the wider Christian context. | argue that the only way to understand Jewish family life in the past is by studying Jewish families within their cultural context. Medieval Jewish attitudes and beliefs must be understood in the context of earlier Jewish traditions as well as in those of the contemporary environment. Practices and ideas were shared by Jews and Chris-

tians, at times in spite of substantive differences in religious belief, and notwithstanding the dissimilar explanations provided for similar customs. By examining the changes that took place in the lives of families in medieval society — mothers, fathers, and children — we may further our understanding of the ways in which Jews in medieval Europe developed and preserved their separate identities, while being full partners in medieval society. Our quest to see and understand women’s lives and history, trom a gender perspective, constitutes a first step toward a more inclusive Jewish history —a history in which medieval Jewish women can find their place in a narrative alongside the rabbis

and students whose works are so well known and so often studied. If we rephrase Abelard’s statement in Jewish terms, we are seeking to examine the connections between pupils and nursemaids, thoughts of scripture and babies being soothed by lullabies, and above all the noisy coming and going of men and women about the house.

Chapter One BIRTH For the first three months the embryo dwells in the lower compartment; the next three months in the middle compartment; and the final three months in the upper compartment. For the first three days, one should pray to God that the infant won’t decompose; from three to forty days he should pray that it will be a male; from forty days to three months, he should pray that it not be a sandal;! and from three months to six months, he should pray that it not be still-

born; and from six to nine months he should pray that the baby will be born safely. And can a man bring the baby out safely? No, rather the Holy One, blessed be He creates for the infant doors and hinges and brings him out safely. — Midrash Yezirat haValad

THE MIDRASH’S DESCRIPTION of the creation of the fetus was a popular one in

the Middle Ages. It outlines the stages of pregnancy and birth and provides explanations of the process. But the story of parents and children begins long before men and women become fathers and mothers. This chapter will focus on the conceptual and practical aspects of birth in the medieval Jewish communities of Ashkenaz. Most research on birth has concentrated on the history of ideas on procreation, with little attention devoted to the more practical and day-to-day aspects of birth.* ‘The most common issues concerning birth, as discussed in previous research, are outlined in the Midrash that opens this chapter. The Midrash designates three persons: God, who is responsible for the cre-

ation of the embryo; the father, who prays for the baby throughout the pregnancy; and the baby itself. A fourth figure in this Midrash, though never mentioned by name, is the mother, who carries the baby in her womb and gives birth to him. While this chapter will discuss all four persons, I will devote most of my attention to the mother, who has received the least consideration to date. The chapter will be divided into three interrelated parts. The first deals with medieval Jewish understandings of the biological experience of birth, as well as religious understandings and beliefs concerning birth. I will then discuss how these beliefs and understandings were expressed in the context of fertility and infertility. Finally, I will examine the extant evidence on birth practices in medieval society. The distinctions between these three sets of issues are somewhat artif-

22 CHAPTER ONE cial, and, insofar as they are interrelated, I will identity the connections. These artificial distinctions do, however, facilitate a more balanced gender analysis of birth. Most intellectual history approaches to procreation have been circumscribed by the textual material, which reflects the thoughts of the men who wrote them, whereas analyses of the social functions of birth have devoted far more attention to women.’ In the context of medieval Ashkenazic Jewry, neither of these analyses has been undertaken in previous research, and as such, this chapter will provide analyses of attitudes toward procreation and of the social history of birth. We should note at the outset that the study of birth, as scholars, and especially feminist scholars have shown, is complex. While it is relatively easy to ascertain what medieval people thought about God’s role or the role of men in procreation, revealing the roles of women, beyond the bare fact that they bore children, is a difficult task. Although birth was women’s business and only women attended births, it is very ditficult for scholars to gain access to the birthing chamber and other arenas in which women may be found. Furthermore, the male expectations and social orders, ever present outside the birthing chamber, undoubtedly filtered into that female space as well. Thus, the study of birth is actually the study of “the intercourse of birth with patriarchy.”*

PROCREATION AND ITS SIGNIFICANCES

Medieval Understandings of the “Nature” of Women Feminist scholarship, since its beginnings, has devoted extensive energy in the attempt to define and identify female spheres and characteristics. While feminist categories have been enthusiastically adopted by some scholars, others have avoided them as overly essentialist. All agree, however, on the significance of women’s ability to give birth. As the anthropologist Helen Callaway remarked, birth is “the most essentially female function of all.” Gender methodologies have attempted to shift the weight from the biological function of giving birth to the role of culture in defining the birth process. ‘This is the course we will follow.’

Medieval society assumed that giving birth and being a mother was an inherent feature of female identity. Exactly how this inherency was understood, is, however a matter of great interest. Women in medieval Jewish society, as in all premodern patriarchal societies, bore secondary status. They were expected to serve their husbands in many ways; giving birth to children, especially male children, was just one of them. In addition, in medieval times women were educated to be mothers. In medieval Jewish society, as in its Christian counterpart, motherhood was one of the central aims of female education.® Although the expectations fostered by such education became relevant when the girls reached sexual maturity, the education of girls as future mothers began from a very young age.

BIRTH 23 Jewish sources speak of the centrality of birth and motherhood for a woman’s identity in several contexts. Although they never systematically discussed women’s ability to give birth or the expectations of women, we do find pertinent in-

formation in discussions of sterility and barrenness. Descriptions of barren women emphasize their profound sorrow and grief and put forth the belief that the happy woman, the woman who has realized her true potential, is the woman with children. This idea is clearly expressed in commentaries on piyutim (liturgical poems) and on the Bible, especially with respect to Sarah, Rebecca, and Rachel, who are all described as suffering from barrenness prior to the births of their sons. In a thirteenth-century commentary on the piyut Ta’alat zu kehafez tor the New Year (Rosh haShana), Rebecca is described as an asura, a prisoner, until she finally gives birth. The commentator explains that barren women are like prisoners in their homes; only once God grants them the long-awaited and coveted sons may they walk around proudly. The text continues, discussing the stress on marital relations posed by barrenness in the case of Rebecca and Isaac. It claims that Isaac was also an asur (prisoner) because of Rebecca’s barrenness. Quoting the verse from Gen. 25:21, “Isaac pleaded with the Lord on behalf of his wife because she was barren,” the commentator remarks: “‘And Isaac pleaded with the Lord on behalf of his wite’: they argued with each other and Isaac said to her ‘you are barren’ and she replied to him, ‘you are barren.’ ”’ In the discussion that follows, although both Isaac and Rebecca are described as suffering as a result of their childlessness, Rebecca is seen as the more miserable of the two. Many later sources repeat the anguished plea of another biblical matriarch, Rachel, concerning her barrenness. Her cry: “Give me children or I shall die” (Gen. 30:1) becomes the staple plea of barren women. A medieval commentary on the Kalir’s piyut for Rosh haShanah “Even hug mazok neshiya” explains the line: “Ke’akeret bayit batehal nukra” (As a housewite at the beginning she was alienated), explaining: At the beginning she was alienated from giving birth, from being a housewife; “Rachel was barren” —she was alienated. But in the end, as in the days of the ripening of her first fruits, like a fig at its beginning, “she gave birth to Joseph” — which is the purpose (takhlit) of all mothers.®

A number of issues are expressed here. The commentator is playing with the multiple etymologies of the verb akar: akara (barren) and akeret bayit (housewife), and the word tkar (the center or main part). Rachel was barren so she could not be an akeret bayit. When she gave birth to Joseph, she was fulfilling the purpose (ikar) of her womanhood by becoming a mother. Another compelling example can be found in R. Judah the Pious’s (11501217) commentary on Genesis. He explains the phrase “Sarah’s lifetimes” (Gen. 23:1)? as meaning that Sarah had two lifetimes — one before she gave birth and one afterward. He explains that her real lite began only after she had

24 CHAPTER ONE offspring, since a woman without children is like a dead person.'? While sources provide some expressions of the sorrow of men without offspring, as when it is said that a man without children is like a dead person,!! it is more common and more categorical in discussions on women. In the Biblical examples above and frequently used in medieval literature, while the husbands of the barren women are surely not pleased with their situations, their wives are distraught. The idea that the fertile wife is the happy and good wife appears not only in theoretical discussions of happiness or barrenness but also in practical advice on how to choose a wife. Sefer Hasidim contains a few directives on the topic. Aside from the religious attributes one should seek in searching for a spouse, the author says that it is important to make sure that the chosen woman will be able to give birth. He suggests: “And one should check the woman because most daughters take after their mothers. If their mother miscarries so will her daughter. Therefore one should pray that God grant him a woman of middot [good qualities].”!* Note that here, the good quality mentioned is not a spiritual attribute, but rather the woman’s physical ability to bear children. Once again, this demonstrates that, at least when dealing with women, the distinctions between what we today would consider biological or physical, as opposed to cultural attributes, were blurred. This idea is repeated in an additional comment in Sefer Hasidim. There, the author explains that men should love and show attfection to their wives because of their wives’ ability to bear children, even in cases in which much love does not exist between the couple.!* He bases his explanation on Jacob’s relation-

ship with Leah and explains that Leah justifiably expected Jacob to love her atter she gave birth to his children (Gen. 29:32), and as a result, all men, even those who do not love their wives ahava shebalev (with their hearts), should show affection to their wives because of the children they bear. In short, according to the men whose writings have reached us, women were expected to have children, and this was their purpose and goal. As will be seen throughout this book, women’s cultural role included not only giving birth, but all the tasks linked to having and caring for young children. Jews and Christians: Attitudes toward Reproduction

These cultural understandings of male and female reproductive “nature” become more complex when different religious beliefs emphasize different aspects of them. Such is the case with Jewish and Christian attitudes toward re-

production. The disparity between Jewish and Christian attitudes is well known and has been the root of many debates over the centuries. While Jews saw the commandment to procreate—“pru urvu” (be fertile and increase) (Gen. 1:28) —as an important foundation of Jewish belief, Christians did not. Many scholars have referred to this distinction as limiting the possibilities for

BIRTH 25 comparison between Jewish and Christian family life, and as justification for studying each society separately.!* Even scholars who have examined Jewish and Christian family institutions in tandem have emphasized the theological gap that exists in this context.!? The Christian preference for celibacy was central from its beginnings.!° Indeed, most of the extant medieval records dealing with attitudes toward procreation were written by the same small and select group that chose celibacy as its way of life. Men who lived in monastic frameworks understood their choice as an expression of their ability to refrain from worldly pleasures and remain pure. Women who chose to be nuns viewed their celibacy, especially if they were virgins, as a ticket to the male spiritual environment and an escape from their fate as women.!’ Yet despite the many references to these men and women in medieval literature, we must remember that this was not the majority choice. Most Christians throughout the ages were married, not celibate. Because they esteemed the ideal of celibacy, Christian society treated married life as the less ideal choice. Nevertheless, in their discussions of noncelibate married women, the medieval authors resembled their Jewish peers. The cultural significance of women as childbearers is also evident in these authors’ descriptions of women who forewent motherhood to become brides of Christ. As a number of scholars, especially Caroline Bynum, have shown, images of birth and of maternity are prominent in descriptions of all women, including those who do not actually give birth.!® Jews, as is well known, did not share this attitude toward celibacy. While only few Christians actually chose the monastic way of life, all saw this as an ideal, albeit one that posed too big a challenge for most. In contrast, all Jews saw procreation as an obligatory and positive commandment. Jewish and Christian at-

titudes toward the biblical commandment of procreation from antiquity through the Middle Ages have been examined in a recent study by Jeremy Cohen. Cohen examined Jewish and Christian attitudes toward the biblical command. His study altered the prevailing tendency to present Jewish and Christian attitudes as completely distinct. Cohen emphasized that in spite of their fundamental ditference, there were also areas of similarity. For example, Cohen maintained that despite the ideal of celibacy, some Christian scholars included procreation as part of the ius naturalis (natural order). In other words, procreation was not simply a commandment to be interpreted allegorically,

but one that had practical implications. Thus, Cohen demonstrates that among the eastern Church Fathers, procreation within a family framework was understood as a positive commandment.!? Procreation was often reassessed and discussed in Western Christian thought throughout the Middle Ages. While some claimed that procreation was a biblical commandment no longer relevant to Christian lives, other interpreters began to attribute more importance to the commandment to procreate within the marital framework. For example, in some cases, the biblical command-

26 CHAPTER ONE ment was recited at the wedding ceremony.*° Thus, it became an important part of the blessing for a newlywed couple. ‘This change in the ceremony was part of a major shift in Christian understandings of marriage that, in the twelfth century, made marriage one of the sacraments.7! At the same time, fertility became a far more important part of the church’s understandings of marriage. This change brought Jewish and Christian understandings of procreation somewhat closer. Studies concentrating on Christian society have emphasized the growing importance of marriage and family in medieval Christian theology and explained the changing significance accorded the family as a consequence. In reality, we cannot determine which came first. Most certainly, thought and practice developed simultaneously and influenced each other. Marian devotion, as well as devotion to the other members of Jesus’ family, es-

pecially his grandmother Anna, were also part of the growing importance of family in medieval thought.** These developments led to a more positive assessment of procreation in Christian thought.’ The increasing convergence of Christian theology and Jewish rabbinic legislation is not limited to attitudes toward procreation. Cohen and others have pointed to shared attitudes toward other aspects of sexual relations besides the question of whether the commandment pru urvu should be seen as practical or allegorical. For example, Cohen has shown that Jews and Christians shared similar understandings of the conjugal relationship. Based on the composition Ba alei haNefesh, written by R. Abraham b. David of Posquiéres (Ra’abad) in the twelfth century, Cohen shows how the Ra’abad’s explanations and justifications for sexual relations between a man and his wife are similar to those provided by theologians such as Ivo of Chartres (1040-1115), Gratian (d. 1160), and Thomas Aquinas (1224—1274).*+ All these commentators, both Jewish and Christian, attributed great importance to the intent of the men engaging in sexual relations. Cohen argues that the Ra‘abad linked the obligation of onah (conjugal obligations toward one’s wife) to the duty of procreation in a manner ditterent than that of his predecessors, but resembling the approach of his Christian contemporaries. Ra’abad argued that if the intent behind the relations was pure, the deeds were too. And conversely, if the intent was not pure, the deeds were not either. Dalia Hoshen, who focused on the ideal relationships between men and women in the writings of Maimonides and the Ra’abad, promoted this idea more forcefully. She proposed that medieval Jewish sages saw celibacy in a more favorable manner than their predecessors and, consequently, restricted the conditions in which sexual relations were to be advocated.”? Putting these findings together, we see that while the importance of procreation within the marital framework grew in medieval Christian thought, Jewish authorities took an increasingly negative view of marital sexual relations performed with improper intent. Hoshen and Cohen concentrate on the philosophy of Maimonides and of

BIRTH 27 the Ra’abad, both of whom lived south of the areas of this study and far away trom the locales of the theologians they cite — Paris, Bologna, and Koln. If we

turn to northern France and especially Germany, we find that, although Ashkenazic Jews living in those countries attached great importance to procreation, some of the writings of Jews of those countries display a more positive approach to abstinence. For example, the author of Sefer Hasidim writes of a hasid who did not want to have sexual relations with his wite after the death of a Zaddik (righteous man).*° This source, combined with the welldocumented attitude of Hasidei Ashkenaz that encouraged avoiding women as much as possible,*’ seems to indicate a shared approach of Hasidei Ashkenaz and their Christian neighbors, an issue that Talya Fishman has recently raised in other contexts.7° These allusions to shared approaches are far from inconsequential. ‘They point to shared beliefs and a common mentality. In spite of these points of contact, however, procreation was viewed as a central point of contention between Jews and Christians in the medieval world. For example, in polemical debates, it was often one of the issues discussed. In Sefer Nizahon Vetus, the Jews accost the monks and needle them on their stupidity and their concealed lusttulness. One of the issues the Jewish disputants mention is their doubt as to the possibility that anyone can live a truly celibate lite. Thus in Sefer Nizahon Vetus, the Jews argue: Ask them: If the Christian priest is supposed to take the place of the biblical priest, why doesn’t he get married and have children like Aaron the High Priest? Moreover, the first commandment given to Adam dealt with being fruitful and multiplying, yet you refrain from this and instead pursue fornication and wine, which capture your fancy.?”

The book discussed this matter again in another passage, where the Christian priests are compared to eunuchs who practice castration. They are accused of wallowing in licentiousness in secret. The author ends that part of the argument by stating: Furthermore it is written “Your wife shall be as a fruitful vine” (Ps. 128:3), and before that it is written, “Blessed is everyone that fears the Lord” (Ps. 128:1). Thus we see that having children is a mark of the God-fearing man. *”

In this debate, the Jew argues over the spiritual character of celibate men, and the whole passage focuses on their decision not to marry and its consequences. Were they to debate with married Christian neighbors, however, this argument

would not have been as powerful. Although these married Christian men might have admitted that there was yet another, higher level of devotion that they did not practice, nevertheless, they would have seen their bearing of children as a way of fulfilling the word of God, much as their Jewish contemporaries did.

28 CHAPTER ONE The Jewish and Christian attitudes toward procreation as described above, raise new possibilities for comparative study of Jews and Christians in medieval Europe. The suggested similarity between the needs and beliets of Jewish and Christian families with regard to procreation is central to this book’s argument. I wish to compare Jewish families to Christian families, rather than to the minority that chose to live celibate lives. As is clear from studies of birth in medieval Europe, Christian couples were interested in bearing offspring, and, when children were not born soon after marriage, they sought solutions to the problem.*! This argument for a shared attitude toward procreation within family frameworks will be the basis of the discussion that follows, where we will dis-

cuss and compare Jewish and Christian attitudes toward fertility and sterility. Men and Women Betore we discuss medieval approaches to fertility and infertility, let us briefly examine the system that emerges from the biological and theological elements outlined above from a gender perspective. Although I will restrict my discussion to the topic of procreation, these concepts can also teach us much about the construction of women’s religious identity in general. One of the ideas suggested by the author of Sefer Nizahon Vetus is that having children is a characteristic of the God-fearing man. Thus, although both men and women were involved in procreation, it was considered a gendered task and was incumbent only upon men. Jewish women were not obligated to perform the commandment of procreation. This religious understanding was based on the biological understandings, which serve as both reason and justification for the exclusion of women. Although Amoraic sources do debate women’s obligation to procreate, medieval sources are emphatic on this point. The medieval commentators, first and foremost Rashi, repeat the Talmudic interpretation of the verse “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and conquer it” (Gen. 1:28) and explain: “It is man’s nature to conquer, it is not woman’s nature.” ** This explanation assumes that women are not naturally inclined to certain types of ac-

tivity. This “biological” explanation is not limited to women’s inability to perform procreative commandments. In cases of other commandments from which women are exempted, we find similar explanations. *’ This view accords with the medieval medical understanding of women as receptacles of the fetus, whose bodies were designed to protect the baby during pregnancy.** Thus, in Christian religious thought, the Virgin Mary served as the mediatrix between God and humanity by protecting Jesus in her womb throughout her pregnancy; as such, her example became a paradigm to be imitated by medieval women.*? Jewish texts also present this view of women’s bodies — as containers for the fetus on its way to this world.*° The Jewish texts adopt Galen’s two-seed theory.*’ According to this theory, both mother and fa-

BIRTH 29 ther contribute to the creation of the embryo, each with his or her own seed. In the Talmud, the implications of this theory are outlined in terms very sim1lar to theories found in contemporary Latin sources: The mother is said to contribute to the more tangible and earthly features of the fetus — the skin, blood, and hair, whereas the father contributes bones, nails, and the brain.*® Most discussions of these topics in both Jewish and non-Jewish sources emphasize the father’s role and minimize the mother’s role, turning her into the means of bringing the infant into the world rather than a central active figure, and her status in the context of birth is unmistakably subordinate. In Jewish sources, procreation is linked with a second legal issue — the number of children needed to fulfill the religious obligation of procreation. ‘This topic, discussed already in ‘Tractate Yevamot, does not seem to have been a topic of much debate in medieval Jewish society. The accepted opinion was that of Beit Hillel — one daughter and one son. By contrast, Beit Shammai believed that the Law required two sons. This obligation is discussed in Sefer Hasidim in a story about a man who had only one child and was worried about his ability to fulfill the commandment of procreation while his wife was nurs-

ing their infant, as the nursing would prevent the conception of another child.*? The precise obligations of this commandment were also important in cases in which a man lost his wife prior to his fulfillment of the commandment and wanted to remarry. In cases in which a man had not yet fulfilled the commandment, he was allowed to remarry earlier,*? thus demonstrating a clear difference regarding remarriage of widows and widowers with small children, a topic that will be taken up in chapters 4 and 5. A final point concerns the importance that medieval people, Jews and Christians alike, attached to the birth of male offspring. The approach of Beit Shammai who argued in the Mishna that one must have two sons in order to fulfill the obligation of procreation is a good illustration of this attitude. Medieval Jewish and Christian societies are not unique in this respect, since most premodern societies agree on this point. Jewish sources attest to the great disappointment that accompanied the birth of daughters. Fathers explicitly prayed for the birth of male offspring, and from the moment of conception, special prayers were recited to help women bear sons.*! Beginning with the Mishna, and throughout medieval literature, men are warned not to pray once the sex of the baby has been determined. This does not mean, however, that the birth of a daughter was not greeted with some sorrow.*? As a thirteenth-century commentator on Genesis commented, girls were not important; boys were the ikar. Consequently, he writes that in the passages on the naming of Jacob’s children, while a reason is given for each of the boy’s names, no explanation is provided for why Dinah was named as she was.t*? While the Jewish expressions of this partiality are unique to Jewish sources, this preference was well known among Christians as well.*4

30 CHAPTER ONE INFERTILITY

The issue of fertility and infertility serves as a window enabling us to examine the interaction of the ideological and biological views discussed above with the pressures exerted on these processes in real life. In medieval Europe, fertility was central to the success of a match. Since children were often betrothed and at times even married before reaching sexual maturity, the birth of children was seen as evidence that the match made by parents, often for financial reasons, was indeed a fruitful one.t? As comparative anthropological studies have shown, the birth of a first child in situations like this often reaffirms and solidifies marriage ties.*° I would even suggest that, in the case of arranged child marriages, this stage in the life of a couple was more important than the marriage ceremony itself.*” By examining medieval attitudes toward fertility, we may view both sides of the same coin. On the one hand, people suffering from infertility are an important topic of discussion. But our inquiry may also teach us much about the treatment of the birth of children in a “normal” fertile situation. If each marriage union, Jewish and Christian alike, was expected to produce offspring, then the treatment of infertile couples provides a useful locus for the examination of shared and differing attitudes of Jews and Christians toward procreation. A central question will be whether or not the differing attitudes toward procreation have any influence over the ways in which Jewish and Christian society treated infertility. The practical methods of dealing with infertility in medieval Jewish and Christian society were not all that different. The ideas expressed in the sources of the two societies, in the case of couples who did not succeed in conceiving, concurred in their aim to determine who was responsible for the problem. Infertility was believed to be hereditary or the result of a physical fault or bewitchment. Women were usually blamed for infertility, and only in rare cases was the cause of infertility attributed to men. In addition, there was a grave dit-

ference between the reasons given to explain female and male infertility. While female infertility was usually ascribed to physical problems, and only rarely associated with witchcraft, male fertility was most often explained as the result of a spell, usually cast by women. This understanding can be seen as somewhat ironic: Men were given most of the credit for the creation of a healthy fetus, but women were held responsible for problems in conception.*® This difference also emphasizes the responsibility allocated women over birth. In addition, ina society in which male pride rested in part on having many children, a man who was sterile faced great embarrassment.*?”

An issue that surfaces frequently in the context of infertility is the status of a marriage in which one of the spouses was unable to have children. The solutions to these problems were varied in both Judaism and in Christianity and

BIRTH 3] were linked to theoretical understandings of the duty of procreation and of the marriage bond as well as to social issues. ‘These understandings shaped the ways in which infertility was identified and diagnosed, and especially the implications of infertility. Infertility was identified in a number of different ways. The most common method, in both Jewish and Christian society, was a physical examination.”? It seems that women were examined routinely, since midwives regularly examined women who wished to conceive. For example, in Jewish communities, midwives accompanied women on their monthly visits to the ritual bath and were expected to help promote fertility.?! If a woman seemed to have some kind of physical problem, a midwite might have commented on it. In addition, many cures and potions to promote fertility were available. It seems that the prevailing attitude was not to let nature take its course, but rather to promote

and encourage fertility. These examinations do not seem to have been common for men. The fact that these examinations were routine for women and rare for men only emphasizes the implied responsibility of women concerning birth. Part of the reason for this discrepancy was that, for men, such procedures incurred shame. While it was easy to note, without a physical exam, that a man’s voice was not deep or that he had no facial hair, a true physical exam required a more intimate inspection. In Christian society, where men were also examined only infrequently, such examinations were usually performed by midwives.’* We have little evidence on this point in the Jewish sources. In one of the few references

to such an examination, R. Eliezer b. Joel haLevi (Ra’aviah, ca. 1140-ca. 1212) discusses a case in which a woman claims her husband is impotent. He mentions the possibility of verifying this accusation by having this man examined, but he says that such a procedure would involve an extreme embarrassment.*+t Christian sources also discuss midwives’ examinations of men charged with impotency and note the shame involved in such a procedure. Perhaps the disgrace that was associated with such an examination and the accusation of a man was behind the common opinion that male infertility was the result of women bewitching men.”? Many cures and charms for releasing men from bewitchment can be found in the sources.”® Medieval people were also aware of the fact that sometimes women and men seemed to be fine physically and still had infertility problems. Therefore a number of other solutions existed that were supposed to enable a diagnosis of problems that had no visible manifestations.’’ For example, a thirteenth-century manuscript of the Midrash Lekah Toy discusses a test for determining who was sterile and who was fertile. R. Tuviah b. Eliezer (ninth century) recommended placing a man’s semen in a cup of cold water. If the semen takes the shape of a man, then he is fertile and if not, he is sterile. For a woman, R. ‘Tuviah recommended taking the leaf of a pumpkin and having the woman urinate on this leaf. If the leaf dries up, the woman is sterile, and if not, she is fertile.°> This

32 CHAPTER ONE experiment is suggested in the medieval Latin medical treatises known as the Trotula as well.?? Most of the techniques proposed in the Jewish sources for test-

ing sterility involve examining women. They include inserting garlic into the womb of the barren woman as well as a number of magical cures, such as using

the placenta of a woman who had given birth in order to aid conception.°° Christian medical writings also include similar cures and it seems that the fertility tests and cures were common to Jews and Christians.°! These examples illustrate medieval society’s concern with solving infertility problems. In some cases, however, these problems could not be solved. Were there differences between the ways Jews and Christians dealt with couples diagnosed as infertile? Given the differing attitudes toward divorce and procreation, we would expect Jewish and Christian legal authorities to propose ditferent solutions in difficult cases. Infertility As Grounds for Divorce

In medieval Christian society, if one spouse was diagnosed as barren, sterility could serve as grounds for divorce. This issue, however, was highly controversial. During the first centuries of Christianity, sterility was seen as grounds for divorce whether the husband or the wife was held responsible for the problem. This was also the prevailing attitude in the early Middle Ages and was, to some extent, strengthened by Germanic attitudes toward fertility. However, in the eighth and ninth centuries, the question of fertility as grounds for divorce was reappraised, and new distinctions were introduced.®* Theologians suggested distinguishing between situations in which sterility was a problem from the onset of a relationship and situations in which sterility ensued at some point after marriage. From the ninth century onward, it became much more dithcult to invoke infertility as grounds for divorce, especially if the couple was not sterile at the start of their conjugal relationship. A woman who complained that her husband was incapable of fathering a child could still obtain an annulment in some cases, but, as part of the attempt to limit the number of legally separated couples, this became increasingly difficult. Accusations concerning infertility were investigated very thoroughly. Although impotence was generally accepted as grounds for divorce, the proofs of impotence were highly disputed. Often, professionals such as midwives were employed in order to verity such charges. [fa man charged his wife with impotence, they would check the

woman and, in some cases, the man as well. [t is illuminating to compare the developments of Jewish attitudes toward divorce in Ashkenaz, specifically in cases of infertility, to Christian developments in the Middle Ages. There is, of course, a fundamental difference between Jewish and Christian attitudes: In Jewish society, divorce was viewed more positively and was regularly contracted. Hence, in our study of attitudes toward divorce in cases of infertility, we will need to compare and contrast Jewish and

BIRTH 33 Christian positions. First, however, a few words concerning divorce and change are in order. One of the most famous developments regarding Jewish family law in the Middle Ages in Ashkenaz concerns divorce and occurred during the tenth or eleventh century, the same period in which Christian scholars were reassessing and severely limiting divorce in Christian society. According to Jewish law, the divorce writ (get) is given by a man to his wife. Consequently, if a woman instigated a divorce claim, a refusal on the part of her husband, to give her a writ of divorce, was a major obstacle. The famous Takkanot (Statutes) attributed to R. Gershom (ca. 960—ca. 1028), Me’or haGolah (Light of the Exile), decreed that a man cannot marry two women and, more important, that a man cannot divorce his wife against her will. Although different interpretations of this decree have been suggested, and the exact date at which his mandates became law is debatable, there is no doubt that these issues were central during the formative years preceding the Crusades, and that R. Gershom’s rulings were the standard from the twelfth century onward.°* The problem of infertility was just one issue linked to the ban of bigamy and that of divorce without the wite’s consent. However, infertility is an important instance, since it was a condition to which R. Gershom’s prohibition against divorcing a woman against her will did not apply. In cases in which the woman was found to be infertile, the situation was governed by the gendered obligation of procreation. According to Tractate Yevamot, a woman is considered barren if she has not borne a child during a ten-year period. I such cases, her husband was expected to divorce her and marry another woman, so that he might

fulfill the religious obligation of procreation. During the Middle Ages in Ashkenaz, men were expected to wait ten years before initiating such a divorce process. Once ten years had passed, men were supposed to divorce their wives and move on. According to the tradition passed down by different legal au-

thorities, and despite R. Gershom’s ruling prohibiting divorcing a woman against her will, in this case, the religious obligation demanded that the man divorce his wife. Yet the influence of R. Gershom’s ban complicated matters. If prior to his ruling, a man could have married a second woman in order to demonstrate his virility, he now had to divorce his first wife in order to do so. In cases in which both husband and wite claimed that the other was to blame for infertility, the ban limited opportunities for justifying the man’s claim. Attitudes toward the issue of female infertility changed during the course of the Middle Ages as well. Elimelekh Westreich has argued that during the tenth and eleventh centuries, in the case of couples who tried to conceive for ten years without interruption and failed to do so, female infertility was cited as legitimate cause for divorce. In these cases, R. Gershom’s ban notwithstanding,

the man was supposed to be forced to divorce his wife and marry another woman. In the twelfth century, this approach underwent substantial change. Subsequent to the ruling of the Ra’aban (R. Eliezer b. Nathan, (ca. 1090—ca.

34 CHAPTER ONE 1170), less importance was attributed to procreation. Men were no longer forced to divorce their infertile wives and were certainly not allowed to marry a second woman in order to fulfill the commandment of procreation.°° The attitudes of the German and French sages to infertility varied according to the problem at hand. A woman demanding a divorce writ on grounds of her husbands’ impotence suttered consequences far different than those undergone by a man claiming that his wife was barren. Since women were not commanded to procreate, they could not claim, as the men did, that they were kept from fulfilling a religious obligation. There were, however, other arguments they could enlist in order to facilitate a divorce. A woman could argue that without oftspring, she would remain lonely at the end of her days and become a burden on society. The Aramaic expression “I wish to have a staff in my hand and a spade for my burial” (hutra ledah umara lek’vurah)°’ is used to exemplify the idea that these women want children so that they will have someone to provide for them in old age. This idea expresses the belief in the inherent need of women to be mothers. It also is a telling comment on women’s position in the ideological framework. As they have no religious obligation to procreate, they cannot make claims based on religious grounds to justify their demand for divorce. Women could, however, make claims based on what were perceived to be their natural qualities, or perhaps, what was seen by the society as their natural weakness. A woman whose nature is “not to conquer” is “naturally” expected to need and desire children so as not to be lonely and bitter in her old age. The main point that comes up again and again is, however, the legislators’ reluctance to intervene in issues that involved trusting women about male infertility. The legislators voiced the fear that women might lie in order to be released from an undesirable marriage. They also expressed hesitation in accepting women’s testimony on their husband’s impotence, since according to Jewish law, women’s testimony is not valid. However, the Mishna and the Talmud already stated that in cases dealing with infertility, women are to be believed.°® The issue was also one of great discomfort, since accusing a man of infertility was an embarrassing ordeal. By law, releasing women from marriage in impotence cases often involved not only a writ of divorce, but also the return of a sum of money from the ketubbah (marriage agreement) to the divorcee. This money was often the locus of argument between spouses during the Middle Ages. The enforcement of the ruling accepting a witfe’s testimony and the returning of the ketubbah money underwent change in the course of the Middle Ages. In the eleventh century, Rashi commented on the divorce of a woman whose husband was impotent, stating that she is to be divorced and given her ketubbah monies. At the same time, he makes a comment that implies that this divorce was less automatic than might be assumed. He says: “One should ask him to give her a writ of divorce, but one does not force him.”°’ These instructions differ from the ruling

BIRTH 35 in previous cases in which men are forced to divorce their barren wives. Rashi’s

grandson, Rabbenu ‘Tam (1100-1171) restates the position that men whose wives claim they are impotent must divorce their wives, yet once again it is not clear to what extent this ruling was actually enforced.’° While the legal authorities agree that in certain situations men should be forcefully persuaded to divorce their wives, we can also discern changes over time with respect to attitudes toward women who complained of their husband’s impotence. As mentioned above, already in the Mishna we find a certain opinion voicing suspicions of women who might fabricate infertility claims. This opinion, which stood in opposition to the decision to accept women’s testimony regarding the infertility of their spouses, seems to have been widely accepted by the Ge’onim in Babylon. In the Middle Ages, if the husband denied his impotence, the woman was not immediately believed. Those

supporting the ruling accepting a woman’s testimony, on the other hand, claimed that no woman would lie about an issue such as this one. The reservations that are mentioned in this context are telling if we consider that there are no discussions in the Mishna’! or ata later date, concerning men who unjustly accuse their wives of infertility. Only women are accused of making false accusations. From the twelfth century on, the legal authorities accepted women’s testimony but demanded that they pay a certain price for the right to divorce. In the twelfth century, R. Isaac b. Avraham (Rizba) supported the acceptance of women’s evidence. His response, however, reveals how equivocal his approach was. He discusses a case in which a woman has been living with a man for three years and found him impotent. He tried to convince the couple to wait an additional year and explains that he himself had difficulties when he was first married and advises the couple to give themselves a little more time. It is important to note that in this case the husband himself admitted that he had difficulties. Rizba, however, poses the woman a new challenge. As opposed to earlier opinions, such as that of Rashi mentioned above, he says that the wife may demand a divorce but that she must forfeit her ketubbah. This financial measure was certainly a major obstacle for any woman suing for divorce, but the Rizba justified this requirement by explaining that only if she sued without demanding money could she be believed.’ A different responsum from the twelfth century, addressed to Ra‘aviah, relating a case that seems to have lasted for many years, broadens our understanding of the way male impotence was addressed. In this case, the couple had been married for sixteen years and the husband was accused of being impotent. In addition to the wite’s testimony, this man also bore the outward signs of a saris (eunuch). He had no facial hair and a high voice. His wite had been complaining for quite some time and had even gone so far as to lock the doors of the synagogue during prayers, refusing to allow her community to leave the synagogue until her plea was heard. This was a standard procedure in medieval

36 CHAPTER ONE communities when a person bore an unresolved claim against someone else in the community.’ It seems that in this case, rabbinic authorities went to great lengths to convince her not to press charges and to attempt a conjugal union. Finally, they submitted a decision to grant her a divorce and give her her ketubbah. It is clear, however, that this case dragged on for quite some time and that this woman had to insist in order to retain her financial rights.’* In these examples from the twelfth century, the wife’s complaint is eventually accepted and a divorce is procured for her. Yet it is important to note that in both cases, the wite’s testimony is not the only evidence. In the case brought betore the Rizba, the husband admitted that he had a problem. In the second case, the husband displayed the outward signs of a eunuch. The many years one of the women in fact spent with her husband — sixteen — and the Rizba’s ruling that she give up her financial rights as a condition for divorce are evidence of the growing struggle women faced when demanding divorce and of the rabbinic attempts to limit their ability. The two twelfth-century sages examined here had different opinions regarding monetary arrangements. Rizba thought that a woman who claimed her husband was impotent should forfeit her rights to her ketubbah in order to be believed, whereas Ra ‘aviah said that it her claim can be proved, she is to receive her ketubbah. During the thirteenth century, this issue is discussed further. Grossman has suggested that the increase in the number of impotence claims might have resulted from the regulations instituted limiting women’s abilities to procure divorce writs. Consequently, one of the only claims available to women was an accusation of

impotence.” Although Rizba’s approach became the standard one, and women who claimed that their husbands were impotent were expected to give up their ketubbah, some authorities did not accept even this ruling. R. Meir of Rothenburg (d. 1293), who wished to limit the phenomenon of divorce, and especially divorce instigated by women, suggested that in his day too many women were attempting to procure divorces on grounds of impotency. © He thus argues that impotence should not be automatic grounds for divorce. His opinion, however,

was not accepted and the Rizba’s ruling continued to prevail.’’ In short, women could obtain divorces if they argued that their husbands were impotent, but they did have to give up some money in the process, and this money was especially precious to a divorcée who probably wished to remarry. Furthermore, this accusation was viewed with increasing suspicion. In many cases, women came under pressure from various quarters and had to be both daring and insistent in order to present their cases. If we try to map out a general trend, it becomes clear that women’s ability to procure a divorce on the grounds of infertility became more restrictive over time.’® The grounds for women’s entitlement to a divorce writ were not religious per se; rather, they were based on understandings of women’s nature and of her role in childbirth and procreation. Women’s rights were restricted by a basic

BIRTH 37 tendency to mistrust women and not accept their word against that of a man who claimed he was not impotent. On the other hand, we can see how, as a result of legislation such as R. Gershom’s bans against divorcing women against their will and a relative devaluation in the centrality of the commandment of procreation, it became more dithcult for a man to divorce his wife. We see here how “natural” understandings of women became religious factors. This is a good example of the difficulty in distinguishing between culture and nature when examining attitudes toward women. ’? What is most striking in the comparative context is how in both Christian and Jewish society in northern Europe and, more specifically in Germany, the ability of couples to get divorced was revised and rediscussed throughout the Middle Ages. While Jews and Christians differed on fundamental issues concerning divorce as a regular social phenomenon, both societies shared the desire to restrict divorces within the frameworks that allowed them. Some of the influential Jewish and Christian figures mentioned here lived in close geographical and chronological proximity. Reginus of Prum (840-915) was born near Speyer and died in Trier, and lived in Prum not far from the younger churchman Burchard of Worms (965-1025), whose writings on divorce were highly influential. Both of them sought to minimize or prevent divorce as much as possible, and their writings were highly influential in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.°° Both these figures lived in the Rhine area, close to important Jewish centers, and R. Gershom Me’or haGolah was, in fact, a contemporary of Burchard’s. It is clear from the medieval Jewish responsa literature that the Jews were acutely aware of the customs of their neighbors concerning divorce. We learn of this familiarity in a question that does not refer to infertility, but to other grounds for divorce. Rashi refers to Christian customs when discussing a case in which a man wishes to divorce his wife because she has developed a physical deformity that repulses him. He says that this man should remain married to his wife, as do the gentile neighbors, and he comments that this behavior is worthy of imitation.®! This attitude seems to be the product of the specific geocultural milieu in which Burchard, R. Gershom, and Rashi lived, as such discussions of divorce and bigamy were not common in other Jewish diasporas, where the divorce process in cases of infertility seems to have been much more expeditious.°7 Despite this similarity, we should note that this comparison 1s very limited, as it pertains mainly to infertility, rather than to other practices related to divorce. Infertility was only one reason for divorce in Jewish society whereas the majority of divorces were most likely the result of other marital ditfculties. In Christian society, on the other hand, infertility was one of the only grounds for divorce. Recent research has indicated that the rate of divorce was quite high in Jewish society, but it is impossible to assess how many of these divorces were related to infertility. This basic distinction notwithstanding, this comparison

38 CHAPTER ONE certainly demonstrates shared attitudes. While we have no hard evidence of dialogue between Jewish and Christian authorities or communities, it is possible to outline a general trend during the Middle Ages, of authorities who sought to limit the cases of divorce. This development becomes all the more important in the Christian medieval context outlined above, in which marriage became an important sacrament and procreation an important part of this sacrament.

FERTILITY

Infertility is the exception that teaches us about the norm. Although it is not as easy to provide details about the lives of couples who were fertile, as they are not mentioned as frequently in the sources, documenting the norm is no less important. A basic assumption in medieval society was that fertility was the norm. A couple was expected to have children as quickly as possible after marriage. As R. Meir of Rothenburg stated in one of his responsa: “Most women conceive and give birth.”>? Although pregnancy and birth certainly concerned both men and women in medieval society, the sources we have, written only by men, provide a very partial glimpse of this reality. Not only were pregnancy and birth experienced by women, but in those times, these women were cared for by other women. This is not to say that birth was a private attair; the opposite is true. As recent research has emphasized, birth was very much a social affair, as the parturients were attended by a number of women in their communities. But birth took place in a gendered space, without the physical presence of men. As such, the extant sources provide only very partial access to the women’s space of birth. The information we do possess on the birthing space, entirely written by men, can serve as a commentary on how men and patriarchy saw birth.*+ The gap between the information we have about birth in medieval Europe and the knowledge that birth was the privileged domain of women has sparked substantial scholarly interest in the topic over the past two decades. Although previous scholars dismissed medieval birth practice as a topic too difficult to examine due to the lack of sources, recently, some scholars, especially feminist scholars, have been eager to investigate this world.®? Approaches toward this topic, however, have changed substantially over time. While early work regarding birth treated the birthing process as a female space to which men had no access and in which common power hierarchies were reversed and women were “on top,” recent research has suggested that birth must be viewed as an integral part of patriarchal society.°° The existence of this female space was not autonomous and cannot be understood independently of the space of the society at large. While birth in medieval Christian society has been the subject of intense scrutiny, the study of birth in medieval Jewish society is still in its infancy. Recently, Ron Barkai has published a book on medieval gynecological texts, in

BIRTH 39 which he discusses obstetric treatises from medieval Spain, but no work has been done to date on Jewish society in Ashkenaz.°’ In the pages that follow | will discuss evidence for the birthing process in Jewish sources. Information about pregnancy and birth is discussed in passing in commentaries on the Bible, the Talmud, and in various piyutim. Some of the commentaries are allegorical and use pregnancy and birth as metaphors, while others sometimes refer to their own day and age in their remarks on biblical events. For example, in explanations of the story of Judah and Tamar (Gen. 38) or that of the midwives in Egypt (Exod. 2), we receive information on the methods of birth in the past and in the contemporary medieval period. Other commentaries explain the laws related to birth such as the laws of the parturient or of circumcision. Additional information can be found in halakhic codes, where mundane instructions on how to treat the parturient at birth can be found, and especially in medical treatises that document common methods of treatment. The information that can be gleaned from all these different sources illuminates the way in which medieval society regarded birth. [ will begin with the allegorical interpretations. From these, we can learn much about birth as a symbol in medieval Jewish society. Birth was understood as the end of a long process, one that was accompanied by pain, fear, and great danger. The parturient was considered in great peril during birth, and every

birth was accompanied by the threat of death. The hours during which a woman sat on the mashber, (the birthing stool) were both treacherous and perilous.°° As such, the hour of birth was, in a sense, a Day of Judgment.®? This idea is expressed clearly in a commentary on the piyut for New Year’s Day (Rosh haShana) “HaYom Harat Olam.” The author writes: “HaYom Harat Olam” [Today is the conception of the world] —for all of man’s nourishment is meted out on Rosh haShana. Like a pregnant woman who conceives now and gives birth after time. For this is based on the verse “Like a woman with child, approaching childbirth, writhing and screaming in her pangs” (Isa. 26:17), so we are before you. For the world is impregnated with the deeds of people, good and bad, and on Rosh haShana all the deeds are accounted for and are judged and on that very day it is decreed whether to good or to bad. On that day the world is in peril until it is judged; just as a woman is in danger when she suffers in labor, so we cry out on that day... . And that is why we say, after the shofar is blown, [the prayer] “haYom harat olam.” Because through the blowing of the shofar, God’s mercy on the world is aroused, as if the world were just created. For in Tishrei [the month in which Rosh haShana falls] man was created; therefore we say “haYom harat olam.” And in the poem “Elohai gadalta me’od,” there are 271 verses [tevot| corresponding to the number of days of pregnancy [herayon (pregnancy) = 271 in gematriya| for a pregnant woman . . .and on Rosh haShana the world is like a woman sitting on the birthing stool [mashber], and because a woman is pregnant for nine months, there are nine blessings on Rosh haShana.””

40) CHAPTER ONE The understanding of birth as a time of great danger stemmed first and foremost from reality; death during labor and birth was not uncommon.”! Traditionally, pain and death during childbirth were attributed to the sin of Eve. The Bible already states that the pain of childbirth is a punishment for that sin: “In pain you shall bear children” (Gen. 3:16). Later, the Mishna explains that

death at childbirth is the result of laxity in performing three specific commandments — the separation of the challah,”* the lighting of the Sabbath candles, and the observance of menstrual purity. These were known, in short, as Mizvot HaNaH (CHallah, Niddah, and Hadlakat haNer).”* A connection between these two explanations was implied. According to some commentators, the reason women were held responsible for these three commandments is related to Eve’s sin. As Midrash Tanhuma explains: For which transgressions do women die at the time of their childbirth? Thus have our masters taught (Sabbath 2:6): Women die at the time of their childbirth for three transgressions: Because they have not been careful in regard to menstruation, in regard to challah and in regard to the lighting of the Sabbath lamp. These three commandments are also from the Torah. ... And why are women charged with these commandments? Our sages said: During the creation of the world, Adam was first. Then came Eve and she shed his blood in that he heeded her. . . . The Holy One said: Let her be given the commandment of menstrual blood so that she may have atonement for that blood which she shed. . . . Because Adam was the challah of the world, when she came and defiled him, the Holy One said: Let her be given the commandment of challah so that she may have atonement for the challah of the world, which she defiled. ... And the commandment of the (Sabbath) lamp exists because Adam was the lamp of the Holy One. .. . But Eve came and extinguished it. The Holy One said: Let her be given the commandment of the lamp in order that she may have atonement for the lamp that she extinguished.”*

Although the Mishna attributes a woman’s death at childbirth to her failure to

perform the three commandments that were her domain, and this understanding was accepted throughout the centuries, few medieval sources emphasize this specific cause of guilt. Rather, the consensus seems to be that at the hour of birth, all a woman’s deeds are judged and not just her performance of these three female commandments. The author of Sefer Hasidim warns people not to gossip or discuss any bad deeds the woman may have done, since any reminder of her sins might tip the scales against her.” Instead, the parturient was to be prayed for. In fact, the first known mention of blessings for the sick connected to the reading of the Torah are blessings for the parturient.”° These understandings again highlight the complex web of connections be-

tween religious understandings and biological and social realities. Many women died in childbirth, and, as in the case of many other deaths in the Middle Ages, the justification offered was religious.

The belief that women died during childbirth because of their sins is, of

BIRTH 4] course, not uniquely Jewish. It might even have been of greater importance in Christian sources. In Christianity, the origin of pain and death during childbirth was also assigned to Eve.”’ Christians, like Jews, believed that women who gave birth without pain were not in E:ve’s lot. In Christian tradition, the Virgin Mary was regularly characterized as not having suffered at birth, while in Jewish tradition, only the midwives in Egypt were ascribed this quality.?° In fact, as Ulrike Rublack has recently shown, women who did not suffer during childbirth were viewed with tremendous suspicion.”? Pain during childbirth was the lot of women and they were expected to bear this pain with perseverance.!0 Birth was also a symbol of the mundane world and its trials and tribulations. A central source in this connection was Midrash Yezirat haValad (The Midrash of the Creation of the Newborn), which was well known in medieval Ashkenaz.!°! The Midrash is based on Tractate Niddah (BT Niddah 30b—31a) and appears in Midrash Tanhuma as well as in medieval works such as Likutei haPardes, attributed to Rashi, and other medieval manuscripts. The Midrash has two versions; one describes the fetus’s encounter with the world before leaving the womb and after being born, whereas the other explains the creation of a fetus in great detail. According to the Midrash, the creation of the embryo is the product of cooperation between God, man, and woman, and is assisted by

an angel called Layil (Night) “When a man comes to have intercourse [leshamesh mitato| with his wite, God calls the angel responsible for pregnancy and says: “Know that tonight this man is sowing the creation of a man.” The Midrash also explains how the fetus is created: R. Eliezer says the man sows white and the woman sows red and they mix with each other and from them the fetus is created according to the will of God. ... The white that the man sows, from it the bones and tendons and brain and nails are formed, as well as the white in the eyes. The red that the woman sows, from it the skin and flesh and blood are created, as well as the black in the eyes. Spirit and soul and image and wisdom . . . and courage — they are given by God.!97

The Midrash describes the time spent by the fetus inside his!?* mother’s womb and divides this period into three parts. It also explains that the sex of the baby is determined within the first forty days. These understandings are medical ex-

planations that can be traced back to Aristotle’s medical treatises on obstetrics.!°+ For example, it was believed that the male’s soul is formed forty days after conception, and the female soul eighty days after conception. These numbers also explain the duration of ritual impurity after birth, as mentioned in the Bible: forty days for males and eighty for females.!°? Consequently, medieval Jewish sources instruct expectant fathers to pray for the birth of a son during the first forty days of a pregnancy.!°° After these first forty days, they believed that the gender of the child had been determined; thus, they prohibited praying for a specific gender.!°7 Although medieval writings discuss the centrality of the father in the for-

42 CHAPTER ONE mation of the fetus and the development of the different parts of his body, the determination of the gender of the fetus was attributed to his or her mother. The extent of the mother’s enjoyment of the act of procreation determined the gender of the child. This belief was shared by Jews and Christians alike.!?° Medieval Jewish texts provide many other details on pregnancy and birth. Although it was commonly accepted that pregnancy lasted nine months, medieval medical sources understood that the term of pregnancy was somewhere

between seven and nine months. Children born after an eight-month term were doomed to death, but those born after a seven- or nine-month term were healthy children. Some halakhic discussions, as well as exegetic texts, distinguish between these two possibilities. For example, most medieval biblical commentators understood the births of the ten tribes as following short pregnancies, whereas Jacob and Esau underwent a full-term birth, as it is written, “when her time to give birth was at hand” (Gen. 25:24). These ideas on pregnancy had practical implications as well. For example, Hasidei Ashkenaz were very concerned about women giving birth on the Sabbath. Although helping a woman in travail was permitted and overrode the laws of the Sabbath,!?? Hasidei Ashkenaz preferred to avoid such an instance. They determined that the duration of pregnancy as between 271 and 273 days. Consequently, they believed they could calculate the day of the baby’s birth. Thus, the readers of Sefer Hasidim were instructed to refrain from sexual intercourse on Sundays, Mondays, and Tuesdays, days that might lead to a Sabbath birth.!!° These many references to birth and its processes in halakhic writings testify to men’s intimate knowledge of this world of women. Although men were excluded from the birth chamber, they were well aware of the many activities within. We may even situate the physical location of the father during birth. One commentator derives the names given to Judah’s sons from his involvement in their respective births. Judah’s first son was called Er (literally, awake);

the commentator explains that Judah was awake all night and listened to his wite’s screams during labor. The second son was called Onan (lament), for Judah cried and lamented his wife’s pain during birth. His third son was called Shelah, (literally, hers), since “the sorrow was hers alone, as he was at Kziv at the time of her birth.” (Gen. 38:5) In the account of the birth of twins related later in that chapter, commentators remark on the birth of twins in medieval culture and the methods of examining and determining multiple births.""! The male authors display familiarity with the female anatomy of birth as well. For example, Rashi explains what the placenta is and says: “It is a kind of clothing that the baby lies in and is called ‘vashtidor’ in French.”!!* It is interesting to note that, in many of these discussions, including most cases of Rashi, commentators almost always provides a parallel vernacular term when discussing is-

sues related to childbirth.''? Clearly, the women who provided accounts of birth used these terms, whereas the Hebrew names were not well known.

BIRTH 43 In summary, our sources document both the religious and personal signifcance attributed to birth. For women, birth was the fulfillment of a social goal as well as a moment of great danger. For men, the birth of a child fulfilled personal and religious obligations, and family was a symbol of prestige and status. Medical Care and Practice When a medieval woman got married she immediately began to hope for the birth of her first child, preferably a son. In Jewish society, midwives accompanied young women to the mikve (ritual bath), and newlywed Christian women also consulted with midwives. Once a woman suspected she was pregnant, her pregnancy was confirmed based on a midwife’s examination of her stomach and breasts.!!* During pregnancy, women were supposed to guard themselves from harm. Pregnancy was considered a period of great vulnerability, and amulets and charms, as well as incantations, were offered by midwives and others to protect the expectant woman. Many took part in guarding and protecting the expectant mother. Men often prayed for their wives, as did other family members and friends as well as midwives and other helpers at the scene of birth.!!? Medieval sources often focus on male activities around birth, but the figures most involved in the practical aspects of birth were the expectant mother and the midwife. Both these female figures were supervised and accompanied by men — the father of the baby and others. For example, the midwite’s employment was often contracted and always paid for by the father.!'© From this perspective, although men were generally excluded from the birthing chamber, their presence and opinions were strongly felt.

Let us turn to the figure of the midwife, who was central not only for the welfare of the mother throughout her pregnancy and birth, but also for that of the infant after he was born. In Hebrew sources, the midwives are called by a number of different names — meyaledet (midwite), isha hakhama (wise woman), or hakhama. The second name, isha hakhama is very much like the term used for midwives in contemporary medieval German and French sources — Weise Frauen or sdges femmes.''’ As noted above, the midwives were central to the birth process and they accompanied the women throughout the period. Midwives or wise women took care of women not only at times of birth; they also examined women throughout their lives and served, in essence, as their doctors. In legal cases that required professional assessment of women’s health, midwives instructed authorities on medical circumstances.'!® For example, R. Hayim b. Isaac Or Zaru’a (late thirteenth century) reports the case of a woman who was ill “in the place of urine.” He explains that in order to determine the exact nature of her problem, she must consult with the wise women who know how to distinguish between the different parts of her body.'!? Another instance in which a consultation with a wise woman is mentioned 1s in the responsa of

44 CHAPTER ONE the Rosh, R. Asher b. Yehiel (1250—1327). He discusses a case in which a man accuses his wife of not being “like all other women” — in other words, that she bore physical abnormalities that resulted in female fertility problems. The wise woman is called to verify this accusation.!7° The term isha hakhama served as a general name for female medical figures who served in different capacities, primarily providing care for other women,

but also as general medical practitioners. For example, a thirteenth-century manuscript refers to a certain Marat Yiska who is called “Isha hakhama leha’ir me’or einayim” —a wise woman who kindles the light of the eyes (i.e., an eye doctor). The same composition refers to another wise woman who treated an ailing baby.!*! In many cases, the midwife is referred to as an Isha hakhama meyaledet (wise woman midwite). As midwifery among Jews, like midwitery in medieval Christian society, was

not officially regulated by the community, few records remain. Hence, the identity of these midwives and the course of their training are largely unknown.

Nor can we determine how many midwives regularly serviced a given community. [f, however, we examine references on gravestones and in lists of Jews killed in attacks throughout the Middle Ages, and include the midwives mentioned in fourteenth-century tax lists, a rough sketch of these female professionals emerges. Midwifery was one of the most highly regarded female occupations. Consequently, it earns special mention in several different sources. !*7

It is one of only two female occupations noted on gravestones, along with women who served as prayer leaders (Mitpallelot haNashim).‘** Their professional status seems to have become part of the midwife’s identity — it also appears in listings of women’s gifts to charity. For example, in the list of gifts donated in Niirnberg, one woman, Marat Rikhzena the Midwife (meyaledet) is listed as having donated money to both the cemetery and the synagogue. !** All the midwives referred to in the sources have a few common attributes. They are all described as being widows and grandmothers.!*? For example: A tax list from 1338 mentions two midwives: Schéntraw, die Hebamme; and Seklin, die Hebamme — both are described as widows.!*© We cannot determine, however, if they were the sole midwives of the community.'*” Although we

know nothing more about any of these women, they were clearly not young mothers. Many other midwives are referred to as mothers of adult children, grandmothers, and even great-grandmothers. Although women who were grandmothers might certainly have been young enough to bear additional children of their own, they were clearly at a later stage in lite. They already had grown children of their own and were no longer tied down by obligations to their own small children.!7° The grandmotherly age of these Jewish midwives as well as their professional status corresponds with what we know about Christian midwives. As in medieval Jewish sources, our information on Christian midwives is rather sparse, since extant legislation concerning midwifery dates only from the fourteenth

BIRTH 45 century. While the thirteenth century was a time of rapid change and increased legislation in the medical profession, midwifery was one of the last areas to undergo such change. A look at more plentiful early modern sources can confirm some of our medieval findings. For example, early modern records from both England and Germany attest that most midwives were older women who no longer had young children under foot. Most midwives were of the middle class and some only worked in periods when their families needed additional income. Many widows who were midwives began to practice shortly after their husband’s deaths, as they were then in need of a steady means of support.!?? All midwives, both Jewish and Christian, appear to have been mothers themselves. This seems to have been a requirement. They learned their profession by accompanying other more senior midwives and by attending many births.

Until the end of the fourteenth century, there was no formal period of apprenticeship. However, only those women recognized as professionals were called midwives. At the end of the fourteenth century, some German cities established licensing requirements for professional midwives, but no such rules seem to have existed within the Jewish communities.!*° Our knowledge about midwives is hampered by the dearth of records on their practice. The secrets of the trade were passed down from generation to generation. Since the practitioners were all women, few could read Hebrew or Latin and the extent of their literacy is questionable.!*! The extant literature was written by men. Consequently, scholars have questioned the relation between these writings and the actual practices of the midwives. Many of the medical sources that have reached us from Christian Europe are Latin translations of Greek and Arabic treatises. Only one group of these texts, those attributed to the Trotula of Salerno, is said to have been written by women or based on the directions given by women.!** A number of Hebrew translations of Greek, Latin, and Arabic treatises from Spain and Provence from the late twelfth century onward have survived. Among them is a Hebrew version of Salernus’s gynecological treatise Genicias, as well as a Hebrew translation of one of the Trotula texts. These treatises, however, as well as others, such as Joel Ibn Falquera’s Zori Haguf were not known in Ashkenaz before the fifteenth century.!*? There is only one central extant medical source that we can be sure was well known in Ashkenaz during the High Middle Ages: the physician Assat’s book known as Sefer Assaf haRofe.!** This book originated in the Gaonic period and

contains cures copied from Latin, Greek, and Arabic sources. The German manuscript of this book contains some German medical terms as well as references to physicians in Germany.!*? There are several gynecological and obstetrical cures in this book, mostly translations of Galenus’s medical treatise. !*° The information in Sefer Assaf is too sporadic to enable detailed understanding of the methods they employed. The same can be said for the references to midwives’ practices in the halakhic materials discussed earlier. In addition, in

46 CHAPTER ONE the case of Sefer Assaf, it is questionable to what extent the cures he suggests were really used, as some of them seem very exotic. Moreover, due to their limited literacy, it is not clear if midwives could have used the book. While references to midwives’ practices may be found sporadically in a number of manuscripts, especially from the fourteenth century onward, only one text provides a glimpse into midwives’ actual practices.!*’ This text is the third chapter of the well-known circumciser’s manual Klalei haMilah written in the early thirteenth century by R. Jacob and his son R. Gershom haGozrim, the circumcisers (literally, the cutters).!*> The third chapter contains explicit references to its writer, R. Gershom, and therefore can be dated to the first third of the thirteenth century.!*”? R. Gershom recorded the practices of the midwives in his vicinity and thus provides precious evidence of their actions. R. Gershom’s manual is of great importance for understanding birth in medieval society. First of all, it gives us a glimpse of cures used by Jews during birth,

which included cooking herbs, smoking substances under the birthing chair, as well as the recitation of a variety of chants and incantations. The cures listed in the manual are similar to those listed in some of the medical treatises of the time, such as Hildegard of Bingen’s Physica and Curae et Causae. More important, the inclusion of the birthing instructions in a circumcisers’ manual enables us to better understand birth and its place in medieval Jewish society.!*° Why was a circumciser interested in birth? If the practice of birthing was the job of women, performed in a female space to which no man was privy, including, by his own account, R. Gershom himself, why is he recording the cures? These questions bring us back to some of the questions raised concerning the involvement of men in the birthing process. The appearance of this circumciser in a central locus, passing on information he learned from midwives to other midwives by way of other circumcisers who read his manual, illustrates the intricacy of the politics of childbirth. Here we find a man placing himself in a position of authority regarding care of women in labor. If most midwives did not know how to read, then any circumciser who could pass on this information gained a new authority over childbirth. It would seem that this is further evidence of the deep involvement of patriarchy in the aftairs of birth. While R. Gershom’s treatise can be seen as a sign of male interest and, to a certain extent, intervention in the world of the midwives, it also provides valuable affirmation of the midwives’ knowledge and authority. The “wise midwives” (meyaldot hakhamot) are the ultimate authorities. They know how to expel the placenta and to identity and prevent miscarriages. ‘They also know how to ward off evil spirits and deal with other problems that come up during birth. This stamp of approval of the midwives’ authority is of great significance if we compare it with the situation in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when midwives were often accused of witchcraft. As scholars have suggested, this accusation was specifically early modern and is not common in medieval Christian sources.!*! The same can be said of the Jewish sources. Although

BIRTH 47 there are some references to older women bewitching women in childbirth, they seem to be the exception to the rule. The references to these “bewitching” women and midwives reveal further details about birth and the identity of those involved in the process. For example the author of Sefer Hasidim relates: In one place where there were many women only few of them were pregnant, whereas in another place almost all are pregnant. They asked a wise-man and the wise-man said: “Know that I have investigated [and found] that in the place where they are pregnant it is because the midwives go with the women to the mikve [literally, in the text, ‘the house of immersion’] and are happy that the women conceive; but in a place where few women conceive it is because those who go with the women to the mikve are not midwives and they bewitch the women so that they do not become pregnant. [And that way] they [the women] will often be menstrually impure and they will often [need to] immerse [themselves] and give them [the midwives] a salary. Therefore, one must carefully choose an honest [kosher] and trustworthy woman, so that she may be trusted when she testifies to proper immersion, and [she should be] a righteous woman who will not bewitch others so that they will [not] become pregnant, for it is easy to cast a spell.!*

This source traces the very thin line between bewitchment and medicine and also illustrates one of the ways in which midwives were paid for their services. This source also reveals that midwives were commonly believed to possess powers to attect fertility. Another example of a woman who bewitches others, in this case a woman in labor, can be found in Rashi’s commentary on the Talmudic story concerning Yohani bat Retavi that appears in the Tractate Sotah. Yohani bat Retavi is mentioned as an example of a “gadabout widow” (Almana shovavit — BT Sotah 22a) who brings destruction upon the world. The Talmud mentions Yohani bat Retavi without explaining what she does. Rashi explains: She was a widow witch, and when the time came for a woman to give birth she would close her womb with magic and after she [the woman in childbirth] would suffer much, she [Yohani| would say “I will go and beg mercy. Perhaps my prayer will be heard,” and she would go and reverse her magic, and the baby would come out. Once she had a day laborer in her home when she went to the home of the woman giving birth and her hired help heard the noise of magic rattling in a dish like an infant making noise in its mother’s womb, and he came and removed the covers of the dishes and the magic escaped and the infant was born. Henceforth, everyone knew that she [Yohani] was a witch.!??

Yohani’s magic is also mentioned by R. Judah the Pious who was also familiar with the tradition referred to by Rashi. He states: “She was a woman who bewitched women so that they did not give birth, since the soul [of the infant]

was in the bowls until she opened [them].”!** It is important to note that

46 CHAPTER ONE Yohani is not called a midwife in any source. Rather she is referred to as a witch

(makhshefah). She does not help the women physically or prescribe herbs; rather, she prays for them. [ would suggest that this source does not indicate an ambiguous category of midwife. Rather, Yohani is one of a number of attendants at birth. As mentioned at the outset of this chapter, every birth was attended by a number of women. The midwite clearly bore professional authority. Also present was a woman who prayed for the parturient. This Jewish woman, perhaps a widow who was known to be righteous, would pray for the Jewish women, just as nuns often attended the births of Christian woman and prayed for them.'*?? R. Gershom’s text supports this suggestion. He distinguishes between different attendants and explains that the wise women encourage the parturient and give her directions how to “bear her fate” (in other words, endure labor), while other women, described as nursing the woman in labor, hold her down.!*° A similar division of labor among the attendants of birth can be found in the Spanish Sefer haToladot. The text describes a midwite who massages the laboring woman’s body while other attendants explain to her how to react to her contractions.!*” Besides these attendants, a praying woman might also have been present. In the medieval texts, the midwife or the other attendants are not suspected of witchcraft. As mentioned before, the midwives were responsible for the welfare of their clients, but many other measures were taken to safeguard women during pregnancy and childbirth. They were fed healthy and wholesome foods, and all their wishes were to be indulged.!*® Pregnant women were not allowed to leave the house on their own and were instructed to wear special amulets and belts. These

amulets are mentioned in the halakhic literature concerning the wearing of amulets on the Sabbath. They are generally called by their Talmudic term “avnei tekuma.” These were stones, some of them red rubies or garnets, which were believed to protect women from miscarrying.!?? A different stone mentioned in the sources is the aetites, which cannot be clearly identified.!°° Other women

hung a gold coin or parts of an animal’s body around their necks. A popular amulet was a rabbit’s heart. Another custom of women was to wear their husband’s belts. These belts were often embroidered with protective formulas.!”!

These beliefs are found in many cultures and were also part of the surrounding contemporary Christian culture. Beliefs concerning foods that were good for the pregnant woman, stones that protected her and her fetus, as well as belts, were all standard care for pregnant women. There were, however, clear religious differences between the Jewish and Christian practices. While we know that the Christian amulets and belts were inscribed with praises to the Virgin Mary and other patron saints of birth, such as St. Margaret, Jews did not use these same formulas. Hildegard of Bingen tells of a stone, sardonyx, that Christian women used during pregnancy to alleviate pain, and during birth to help expedite labor. They put this stone on their stomachs and prayed to Jesus for protection.!°* While Jews used similar stones during labor, they did not

BIRTH 49 pray to Jesus. This is merely one of many examples of a shared culture with clear religious distinctions. Not only were pregnant women protected during pregnancy, the rooms they gave birth in were also prepared to safeguard them from harm. One of the main threats from which the Jews believed women during labor and after birth must be protected was the figure of Lilith. Amulets were hung around the lying-in room and the parturient concealed an iron knife under her pillow. This knite was supposed to protect her, by summoning the Matriarchs — Bilhah, Rachel, Zilpah, and Leah (BaRZeL = iron in Hebrew). Large bowls used for magic were positioned at the entrance to the room. In addition, the midwives knew and whispered biblical verses as well as mystical formulas such as the verse from Isa. 51:14 “Quickly the crouching one is freed,” which was supposed to expedite delivery. Notwithstanding the internal Jewish explanations given for them, none of these protective measures was unique to medieval Jewish society in Ashkenaz. Some of them may be found among Christians, whereas others may be found in other Jewish communities. The affinity between the Jewish and Christian customs related to birth is evident in one additional issue related to midwives. As it seems that many medical techniques were shared by Jewish and Christian midwives, we might inquire into the relations between Jewish and Christian midwives and between Jewish parturients and Christian midwives. The issue of Christian practitioners attending Jewish women at birth is already raised in the Tractate Avodah Zara. The Mishna states that a gentile woman may assist a Jewish woman during childbirth, and the Talmud concurs, adding the further stipulation that the gentile midwite not be left alone with the parturient. The same law states that a Jewish midwife may not assist a gentile woman.!°* The reason given for this prohibition is that in doing so, they would help in giving life to a child of idol

worshipers. Jewish women were not permitted to be alone with Christian women because of the fear that the Christian midwife might kill the baby. These laws and the reasoning behind them seem to indicate a deep suspicion toward non-Jewish midwives. Some of the previous discussion in this chapter can explain this suspicion. While the techniques the midwives (Jewish and Christian) used were similar, the medical practice was accompanied by many other actions with a distinct religious flavor. Calling out to the Virgin Mary during birth was certainly encouraged by Christian midwives, just as the prayers uttered by Jewish women were distinctly Jewish. Religious beliefs were often part of the standard medical practice. This might have posed dithiculties for Jews and Christians in particular situations. In fact, Jews did employ Christian midwives, as the ecclesiastical rulings of the period demonstrate. The laws prohibiting the employment of Christian midwives by Jews were reiterated several times. An examination of ecclesiastical legislation reveals, however, that unlike the prohibition against employing

Christian wet nurses, which was reissued regularly, the ban on employing

50 CHAPTER ONE Christian midwives was less frequently repeated. While the prohibition against employing Christian wet nurses is repeated more than fifteen times during the period from the last third of the twelfth century until the mid—thirteenth century, the employment of Christian midwives is mentioned in only three documents.!°+ Even more significant is the fact that we find no prohibition against the employment of Christian midwives in the documents of the Third Lateran Council, whereas the employment of Christian wet nurses by Jews is forcefully condemned.!*? The only time the employment of Christian midwives is mentioned in Jewish sources 1s in restating the legal decision that they may not attend a woman alone. By contrast, Christian wet nurses are mentioned many times. !°6

The reason for this difference in attitudes toward the employment of Christian midwives, as opposed to Christian wet nurses, is not stated in the texts and one can only surmise its rationale. One possibility is that the smaller number of references to Christian midwives is a reflection of reality. Whereas every child whose family hired a wet nurse needed his or her own wet nurse, the same midwife could help a number of Jewish women give birth. Therefore, even if the community had only one Jewish midwite, she could help perform many deliveries, obviating the need to turn to a Christian woman for help. Acompletely ditferent argument for the relative paucity of references to Jews employing Christian midwives in Christian and, especially, in Jewish sources is related to the medical profession in general. It is clear from studies of the period that Jews regularly employed Christian medical professionals. ‘Two Ashkenazic sources from the thirteenth century provide good examples of how widespread this practice was. On the one hand, R. Elhanan (d. 1184), the son of R. Isaac the Elder (known as R’i haZaken) states that a baby should not be left in the home of a Christian doctor or healer for a lengthy period of time. He says: “As for a baby [male or female] who needs a cure from a non-Jew, it seems from [this ruling] that they should not be left in the home of the nonJew on their own without any Jew present for a month or two.”!?” Although R. Elhanan’s ruling aimed at limiting the time spent by a child in a Christian home, the details of this ruling reveal much. Children may stay at a healer’s home for more than a month if they have an adult Jew with them, and they may also stay for a shorter time by themselves. This, in and of itself, is evidence of regular contact between Jewish and Christian medical practitioners. Rabbi Isaac b. Moses gives his permission for contact between Jews and Christian medical professionals and states: “And it seems in my eyes, to me the author, that all this [the restrictions concerning the use of Christian medical protessionals| is restricted to cases when the service is for free; but if it is paid for, it is allowed.”!°®

There are many examples of the employment of Christian doctors by Jews in Ashkenaz. The Ashkenazic manuscript of Sefer Assaf mentions by name a number of Christian doctors who live along the Rhine valley. A story in Sefer

BIRTH 51 Hasidim mentions a Jew who held a Christian medical textbook in security for a loan.!?? R. Gershom’s manual, mentioned before, recounts an event in which it was necessary to turn to a Christian doctor when the Jewish midwife was not successtul in curing a baby injured during his circumcision ceremony. The baby was finally cured when the mohel (circumciser) went to a non-Jewish doctor and bought a bandage from him.!°° The case brought by R. Gershom suggests that one turned to Christians for help only when other attempts failed. In his case, he tells of a Jewish midwite who also tried to help betore the Christian doctor was contacted. Other sources, however, tell of contacting Christian practitioners immediately. For example, Rabbi Judah b. Asher (Rosh) tells of an eye disease he had as a child, which a Jewish wise woman healed after a Christian woman had failed to cure him.!°! These few examples display some of the many contacts that existed between Jews and non-Jewish medical professionals. Although we find some preference for using a Jewish practitioner, it does not seem to have been the general rule. I would suggest one of two possibilities with regard to the employment of Christian midwives. The first option is that Jews preferred to employ Jewish midwives whenever possible. If so, the relative indifference of Christian law to the employment of Christian midwives by Jews reflects the application of this principle in practice. Another option would be that Jews employed Christian midwives routinely, as they did Christian doctors. But as medical professionals, unlike wet nurses or servants, did not have to live in the home, church authorities did not see this relation as problematic, and few comments were made on the practice. I would suggest that the two options are not in contradiction; Jews regularly employed Christian midwives, although they may have preferred Jewish professionals. Perhaps in smaller Jewish communities, where there were no Jewish midwives, it became necessary to call upon the services of Christian neighbors. Research done on midwifery in early modern Europe in recent years supports many of these suggestions. For example, studies on midwifery among minority religious groups, such as the Quakers in seventeenth-century England, reveal that they preferred to employ a midwite of their own religious group. Protestant women also preferred Protestant midwives over Catholics. At times, however, women of other religious groups were employed due to the lack of “in-house” professionals or as a result of the expertise others were believed to possess. In such cases, the groups made sure to have the woman in labor attended by one of their own number at all times.!°7 The fear of religious conversion of the mother during birth was real, as birth was a time of great pain and fear. Jews, like members of other religious groups, feared that a midwite of a ditterent religious persuasion might convince a panicked woman to convert. While Jewish sources do not mention this fear, they often cite the words of the Talmud that warn of the possibility that the midwife might kill the baby. However, a number of Latin sources tell of conversion

52 CHAPTER ONE “miracles” at time of birth. For example, Vincent de Beauvais (d. 1064), as well as others, relates cases in which the Virgin Mary appeared to a Jewish woman

in labor and convinced her to convert.!©? Early modern sources claim that some Jewish women called on Mary during birth, praying for her help, even when they did not intend to convert.!®* The great fear that seized women at the time of birth and which made birth seem like a Judgment Day had other consequences besides conversion. Among Christians, many women confessed as they went into labor, so that if they died during childbirth they would be absolved of their sins. Many women revealed secrets, including the conception of children out of wedlock. In fact, midwives were considered prime witnesses in paternity suits in medieval Christian society.!©° Sefer Hasidim also relates a case in which a woman revealed the true paternity of her child while in labor.!©° It is possible that women preferred to reveal these secrets to midwives of their own religious persuasion. There was an additional element of the Christian midwite’s practice that might have deterred Jews from employing them. Midwives were responsible not only for the mothers, but also for the infants after birth. Not only did they clean and check the babies after they were born, but they also performed a religious function. Christian society displayed a growing concern with the need to baptize babies as quickly as possible so that they would be admitted to heaven if they died. From the early thirteenth century on, it became customary for midwives to baptize babies in the vernacular. If the baby survived, this action was confirmed by a member of the clergy.!©” Perhaps some Jews feared that a Christian midwife might baptize their babies. Although they bore mutual suspicions and Jews preferred Jewish midwives, Jewish and Christian women remained in daily contact. It is likely that, just as Jewish and Christian doctors were in constant contact, so too were the midwives. We also know that Jewish and Christian women exchanged remedies.!©° Although we have no hard evidence of contact between Jewish and Christian midwives in medieval Ashkenaz, I would suggest that such contact was likely.

A CHILD Is BORN

After birth, the midwife and the attendants devoted their attention to the infant and its postpartum mother. Usually, they prepared food intended to strengthen the parturient; a chicken was often slaughtered for her. In order to guard her and her child from any lurking evil spirits, she was never left alone. Immediately following birth, the baby was washed, sprinkled with salt, and swaddled. Salting, a widespread custom among Jews and Christians, as well as in other societies, was understood as a protective measure. The practice of swaddling was also widespread. Babies were wrapped in large cloth diapers in a way that was believed to help shape their bodies.!°”

BIRTH 53 The newborns remained with their mother and her attendants during the weeks following birth. If the newborn was a boy, he was separated from this group of women for the first time on the day of his circumcision. On this occasion, his father first formally recognized him as his son. After the circumcision ceremony, the infant was returned to the sphere and care of the women. Female infants remained with their mothers. There is no definitive evidence concerning their naming, a topic that will be taken up later in the book. The parturient rested in bed (known as the Kindbett) during the period following birth. Sources from the fifteenth century mention a lying-in period of five to six weeks, but we have no evidence from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. In any case, it is clear that the first weeks after birth were spent with women who took care of the new mother and supervised the infant’s welfare. This brings us back to some of the issues raised at the beginning of the chap-

ter. The process of birth did, in fact, take place in a female environment. Women were actively involved in all stages of birth. We do not know where the

men were and what roles they played. On the other hand, when we turn to sources describing the ideological and religious understandings of birth, only men are present, while women are conspicuously absent. These two glimpses into medieval life seem somewhat disconnected. However, as this chapter has demonstrated, although men were not present at birth, they were part of birth and their interest in what went on within the birthing chamber was intense.!/° Although their involvement was of a very different nature, they too played a part in the dramas of pregnancy and birth. Men prayed for their wives throughout pregnancy. First they prayed that their wives would conceive, then for the conception of a boy and for a healthy pregnancy, and finally, for a safe delivery. The wish for male offspring was also central in men’s involvement. Sources also point to several male authorities who provided advice concerning pregnancy and birth. We read of R. Judah the Pious instructing women on which women should accompany them to the mikve. It is possible that some men had a say in their wives’ choices of attendants. Rashi tells us that it was accepted practice for the husband to pay the midwife’s fee.!”! Men were charged with summoning the midwife when the moment of birth arrived, and some of the chants and formulas used to protect women during birth were taught to the midwives by men.'’* In addition, patriarchal society expected women to give birth to male offspring. We have no idea how women felt about this, although it is likely that, given the educational ideals of their period and society, they too wished for male offspring.'”? We can conclude that although the father remained outside the birthing chamber, his presence was felt within. The midwife was a mediator between the waiting men and the mother, both during and after labor. She took care of the expectant woman and conducted business with the father. She supervised the birth and related its proceedings to the men waiting outside the door, bearing the good news when the right time came. If the baby was born dead

54 CHAPTER ONE or died at birth, or if the mother herself died during childbirth, it was she who informed the waiting father. Although the midwife was often the one who informed the father of the sex of the newborn, some sources accept her testimony as to the hour of birth, but do not allow her testimony on the sex of the baby.!’*+ Perhaps they feared that a midwife might declare that the newborn was a boy in order to pacify a waiting father, and this might cause troubles atterward. In any case, this division of midwives’ responsibilities accords with the other issues examined. She was to be trusted on practical matters (such as the time of birth), but not with the determination of the sex of a child. When a son was born, she mediated between the female and male space in an additional way. According to R. Gershom the Circumciser’s book, it was the midwife who prepared babies for the circumcision ceremony.!”” The circumciser is a second mediating figure. As will be discussed in detail in the next chapter, he turned a male infant into part of the male community.

He entered into the female space both before and after the circumcision to check his patient. This relationship is supported by the text discussed above, in which the circumciser’s manual includes a chapter devoted to midwitery techniques. This may be an attempt to supervise this area in which women were the practitioners. Research on Christian society has illustrated symbols of male involvement in the seemingly female birth process. For example, Gail McMurray Gibson has argued that pictures on trays used for serving the parturient emphasize the male supervision that underscored the events of birth. Along these lines (although perhaps in a more forceful way), I would suggest that the connections between the midwives and the circumcisers, specifically, as well as the wider engagement of men both on the ideological level and from behind the doors of the birthing chamber, reflect male involvement in the birth process. Birth was the moment of entrance into society. Girls were born into the milieu they would belong to for much of their lives — they too would be mothers in time. Boys had to start the process of joining male society. Both girls and boys had to become part of their communities. The ways in which these initiations were conducted will be taken up in the next chapters.

Chapter Two

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM The baptism of Jews includes a peculiar custom: they perform it by cutting. — Wolfram von Eschenbach, Willelham

IN MEDIEVAL JEWISH SOCIETY, as in all societies, the days after birth were days

of great concern for the newborn and his or her mother. Many ceremonies were performed to help the society and the family cope with this concern and to welcome the newborn into their midst. These ceremonies marked the acceptance of the baby into the community and were designed to protect it from evil spirits. Jewish boys were welcomed into both their families and their community by way of the circumcision ritual that took place eight days after birth. This ritual will be the focus of this chapter. We will discuss the meager information we possess on the welcoming of girls into medieval society, along with additional birth ceremonies in chapter 3. The circumcision ritual was a central religious obligation and a significant community event in medieval Europe. We find details concerning the time of the rite as well as the identity and actions of the participants in a wide range of texts. Because of its centrality, circumcision provides us with a window into the organization, hermeneutics, and practices of medieval Jews.* As a male ritual, circumcision reflects, in a condensed form, traditional gender divisions and understandings within medieval Jewish society. Since circumcision was also central in medieval Jewish-Christian discussions and polemics between Jews and Christians, it provides a useful case study for these relations and their social implications. We may better understand the specific social and cultural

significances attributed to circumcision in the Jewish-Christian context by comparing it with baptism. Over the past years, circumcision has been the topic of much research and discussion. Two books have been written on the topic, and a number of essays and collections of essays have been published. Nissan Rubin’ described the practice of birth ceremonies during the period of the Mishna and the Talmud; Lawrence Hottman discussed the development of the circumcision rite in Gaonic times, devoting special attention to its gendered implications.t The two authors utilize different anthropological approaches to circumcision and discuss their applicability to Jewish sources. Both discuss three central approaches to circumcision in anthropological

56 CHAPTER TWO studies. ‘The first approach, the psychoanalytic one, has attempted to integrate Freudian theory and interpret circumcision as an expression of the fear of castration. A second approach analyzes circumcision as a male rite de passage from childhood to sexual maturity and adulthood.’ A third approach, adopted by both Hoffman and Rubin, explains circumcision as the Jewish rite of child initiation, the initial male experience the newborn undergoes. This approach, like the other approaches, does not analyze circumcision as a birth ritual, but as a male ritual. Although these two categories are not mutually exclusive, the emphasis on the male aspects of the ritual often comes at the expense of analysis of its life-cycle context. Rubin collected the sources on circumcision from the Mishna and the Talmud and discussed the rite’s historical development during that time period. He followed Eilberg-Schwartz, who suggested interpreting the circumcision ceremony as one through which boys are initiated into the “Jewish male cosmic order.”© Hoffman treats two central aspects of the circumcision ceremony. He discusses the symbolic significance of circumcision, especially of the blood of circumcision, comparing circumcision to early Christian understandings of

baptism, as well as the understandings of men and women in rabbinical thought, especially those of the Gaonic Period (eighth to ninth century), when the canon of the ceremony was fixed. Hoftman’s study outlines the development of the liturgy and the interpretations of circumcision, but ignores the historical context of those rituals.’ He extends his study to the medieval period and discusses the participation of women in the ceremony, a topic that will be central in this chapter as well. Hoftman’s and Rubin’s studies will serve mainly as background for developments that preceded the Middle Ages. The medieval Ashkenazic circumcision rite will be our focus here, and, in contrast to previous research, [ will not focus on the religious significance of the ceremony, but rather examine how we may gain insight into the values and social practices of medieval society through examining this rite. Over the past decades, the study of ritual has given rise to a number of different approaches. While some have seen rituals as an expressive discourse on society, others have argued that rituals expose power structures within a given society, by affirming its hierarchy or, alternatively, by undermining the accepted social order.® As the circumcision ritual is the performance of an obligatory act and a Jewish institutional rite, it cannot be read as an attempt to undermine hierarchy or authority as a whole. The ritual does allow us, however, to examine the way this hierarchy is expressed, while also exposing tensions within medieval Jewish society. The first parts of this chapter will discuss the circumcision ceremony as it

took place in Ashkenaz in the High Middle Ages and will emphasize the changes in the performance of the ritual and in the identities of the participants. A comparison with Christian baptism will accompany this discussion.

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 57 The last part of the chapter will suggest a social interpretation of the ceremony and present Jewish society in light of this ritual.

CIRCUMCISION AND BaPTISM: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS

The obligation of circumcision appears in the Bible (Gen. 17) and refers specifically to the circumcision of infant males. In later writings, such as the Mishna,

the commandment of circumcision is included among the many obligations incumbent upon fathers educating their sons.” Scholars who have studied the ritual have pointed to several phases in its development. Although it is clear that circumcision was practiced well before the early centuries of the common era, we have no information on how the ritual was conducted prior to the Mishna.!° The Mishna cites the blessings said at the ceremony but provides few other details.1! The earliest sources providing a full description of the practice of the rite are from the Gaonic Period, in the Siddur of R. Sa’adiah Gaon and Seder R. Amram Gaon. During this period, two elements were added to the ceremony that do not appear in earlier sources —a prayer in Aramaic for the newborn and his mother, and a blessing on the wine, which became an integral part of the ceremony.!* The custom of preparing a chair for the prophet Elijah was also developed at this time.!°

The obvious parallel to circumcision is baptism. From the beginning of Christianity it was meant to replace the Jewish rite of circumcision.!+ During the first centuries of Christianity, the differences between circumcision and baptism were very pronounced, as circumcision remained an infant ritual, whereas baptism was a ritual for adults who chose to convert to Christianity.!? The tradition of baptizing infants became prominent from the fourth century onward. Consequently, the parallels between the two ceremonies, circumcision and baptism, grew. A basic difference between the two rites remained, however — while only boys are circumcised, both girls and boys are baptized. Despite this central gender difference between the two rituals, a difference that also has implications for the understanding of broader differences between Judaism and Christianity, I will not address this issue, as its analysis transcends the bounds of the historical period in question. !® Due to the importance of baptism, the ritual was often discussed during the Middle Ages. During the early Middle Ages, the ceremony had a number of variations, depending on the locality in which it was conducted. The ceremony underwent reform during the Carolingian period, as part of an extensive attempt to uproot the remnants of pagan customs remaining within Christian religious activities and to unity practice. Some scholars have argued that the importance of baptism as a sacrament, in comparison to that of the Eucharist, gradually diminished during the Middle Ages. Nevertheless, even if baptism did lose some of its centrality, it remained an essential part of Christian prac-

58 CHAPTER TWO tice.!7 The ritual underwent a number of changes during the Middle Ages. After the Synod of Canterbury (1214), it became increasingly accepted for infants to be baptized immediately after birth. In life-threatening situations, the midwife or father of the baby could perform an emergency baptism.!® This act did not take the place of the formal baptism ceremony. Babies who were baptized immediately after birth, were not named right away, but in a church ceremony performed later.'” More central to our discussion is the reorganization of the institution of coparenthood during the Carolingian period. The co-parents (often known in modern discourse as godparents) were adults not related to the infant who participated in the baptism ceremony alongside the biological father of the baby. They helped prepare the newborn for baptism and held him/her during the ceremony. This role spread throughout the Byzantine Empire in the fourth century, and gradually became accepted in the western part of the empire as well, particularly under Charlemagne’s rule, during the Carolingian period. Prior to this period, babies were prepared for baptism and escorted to the baptism font by their parents and other relatives. No co-parents were chosen to perform this function.7!

The co-parents had relationships with both the infant they sponsored, for whom they were considered spiritually responsible, and the biological parents. Research has shown that the relationship between the co-parents and natural parents was considered the most binding. The most important role the co-parent had was carrying the infant to the baptismal font and back and holding him/her during baptism. This action, suscipere or excipere in Latin, was understood as a symbolic rebirth, meant to remove the sin of carnal birth from the child and turn him/her into a Christian. The co-parents answered the questions posed by the bishop or priest who officiated over the ceremony. In addition, they

dressed and bathed the infant before baptism and often bought the newborn clothes for the ceremony —a white gown and a small white cap. At times, they also prepared a meal in honor of the baptism and gave the child additional gifts. During the early Middle Ages, it was customary for the co-parent to be of the same gender as the infant. Over time, more co-parents were added. In the fourteenth century, for example, one can often find three co-parents attending a baptism. The number of co-parents chosen varied by locality. In Italy for example, there were often three or more co-parents, whereas in Germany, from the tenth century onward, there seems to have been a concentrated effort to restrict the number of co-parents.** Relatives were not allowed to act as co-parents, and marriage between the co-parent and the baptized child was prohibited and considered a form of incest. A number of studies have examined co-parenting practices in medieval Eu-

rope. For example, Christiane Klapisch-Zuber noted that the men chosen as co-fathers were usually of higher social status than the family who chose them.

Parents often chose patrons or potential benefactors in order to cement the

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 59 connection between the two families.*2* Women, on the other hand, chose their co-mothers from among their close friends. ‘This gendered ditterence is certainly a statement on the roles of men and women in medieval society. When parents had to choose co-parents for their children, they considered the social benefits these connections would create and strengthen. While they did not expect the co-parent to take charge of the newborn’s religious education (although this was officially one of their duties), they did hope for an economic agreement with their co-parents or at least for the promise of future prospects. Alliances like co-parenting should be viewed as a strategy for building partnerships and associations between different strata of medieval society.*+

These findings have been reinforced by the research of two anthropologists — Sidney Mintz and Eric Wolf — who studied co-parenting practices (compadrazgo) in Puerto Rico. Wolf studied people in rural, lower-class society and discovered that they preferred to honor close friends and family members, feeling that they could turn to each other for help and support. Mintz studied people in urban, middle-class society and found that they, like medieval Christian urbanites, preferred to honor people one step above them in social rank. I will

return to their findings at the end of the chapter.”? Before we compare medieval Jewish and Christian ceremonies, one more word about the relative functions of baptism and circumcision is in order. Baptism and circumcision were viewed as analogous in the medieval context. This idea resonates in passages found in Sefer Nizahon Vetus, where baptism and its validity are discussed. ‘The author argues that if Christian baptism is based on Jesus’ baptism, then they should have imitated that baptism in all its particulars. In fact, however, Jesus

and John were baptized in the Jordan, which consists of fresh water, while they are baptized in drawn water to this day. Furthermore, just as they derive the requirements of baptism from Jesus’ behavior, i.e., from the fact that he was baptized himself, in the same manner they should derive the requirement of circumcision, for Jesus and John were both circumcised.°

The link between the two ceremonies is mentioned in Christian sources as well. Wolfram von Eschenbach (1170-1217), the author of the thirteenthcentury novel Willelhalm, has one of his heroes say: “The baptism of Jews includes a peculiar custom: they perform it by cutting.”*” As both ceremonies are birth rituals, the speaker presents them as essentially the same ceremony, in spite of the different customs attached to them. The connection between both rituals is also portrayed in medieval art. For example a drawing in a thirteenthcentury Bible moralisée trom France (figure 1) depicts the circumcision of the Jews by Joshua in Gilgal, after the crossing of the Jordan (Josh. 5), as a kind of adult baptism.7° In medieval Christian Europe, the comparison between the two rites had immediate implications. The two rituals identified and signified Jews and

Pe sitBa ge

i BE oe EE :Pere. fa ‘ Yi he ™*Be pois Paef i ee oeTR : e RE. id } 5 et i ‘ ba 5 ig eg 4 a . s . + } ay ‘ Phe Ps iJ hy ae - + / te ‘ f *. vf ue a ag ha , ys fe — oy a ori a — | on ~ a

; sod \ i ie a F a 28 “ o i ne 9 : > of ‘i fe F H § pe yi

ee BP a

aa: 3Fare. R “ee Se wee f! a te raid al “i is sey - p7 +5 4F reyf, 2a :Ud A ‘ks‘ai L»?4i)ath P| "i BP ' re Pd

imts ithe ri it A| |Yo A lle es,Aa? “Se 7 aSea Pe a| i+ Pe Fs Ml me Li) “Pee ee - Pi ! 4 Po i - 7a } q 7Bf 4 erth i te) un |VA then +i :Es: . | G| SELaTABU 1 fet € eo yes aea 4fymA

I| eT— bees a a TST Sa es asas RS alee A rag EO|! gn

MENT YY P= PUTED a: am. .—l oF PF 8. ff Bsr . “ae a Z é , sce i : 4 n =o : ‘e ie * ‘ ad : e ' " iS 2 “a ‘A ‘

Figure 4. Isaac’s Circumcision. Nicolas of Verdun, Verduner Altar, Stitt Klosterneuburg, Klosterneuburg, Austria. Photo courtesy of Stift Klosterneuburg.

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 75 mekho’ar (ugly). His language is especially sharp, in that he advises anyone who fears the Lord to leave the sanctuary. These statements suggest that the change was not readily accepted, perhaps especially by women. After all, birth was an exceptional arena dominated by women; perhaps some of them saw circumcision as an extension of their responsibilities toward the child. In light of these sources and our discussion of the role of the male ba’al brit, I would suggest that the role of the ba’alei brit became widespread in Ashke-

naz during the tenth and eleventh centuries. The task was allotted to men or women and was called by the general term ba’al brit, regardless of the gender of the person who held the baby. Sometimes the ba’al brit was a man and sometimes a woman, but both options were common. The task comprised many roles and might be shared by several persons — washing and dressing the infant, taking him to the synagogue and holding him during the ceremony. The

distinction between the ba’al brit and the ba’alat brit became more pronounced as objections to women’s holding of infants in the synagogue grew. Although it is impossible to pinpoint the first objections, as there might have been an underlying dissatisfaction or discomfort with this custom throughout the Middle Ages, these protests became more audible during the thirteenth century, with the objections of R. Meir and others. The changes in female involvement in the ritual may account for the wide variety of roles linked with the ba’alei brit in the fragments that have reached us. R. Jacob the Circumciser’s account of the ritual, in which the ba’alat brit is the wife of the ba’al brit, marks the beginning of a period in which this became her accepted role in the ceremony, once she was no longer allowed into the male part of the sanctuary. In addition, the fourteenth-century sources’ insistence that the prerogative of bestowing the honor of ba’al brit was that of the men, testifies both to women’s desire to be part of the ritual process and the struggle around the appointing of a ba’al brit. This desire is hardly surprising if we remember that during this period of the baby’s life he was in the sole care of women. Women took care of him from birth to the circumcision ceremony and they resumed caring for him immediately after the circumcision ritual. R. Meir of Rothenburg and others wanted participants to be male, perhaps in order to emphasize the male character of the ritual. In a comment made by R. Jacob Mulin, the separation of the male circumcision space from the female birth space is conveyed very clearly: Our teacher R. Jacob Segel said: Maharam |[R. Meir of Rothenburg] declared that the woman who is a ba’alat brit, and takes the infant from the parturient to carry him to the synagogue to be circumcised, should bring him to the entrance of the synagogue but should not enter to be a sandek and have the child circumcised on

her lap. For it is an act of immodesty for a woman to walk among men. And he said that certain people who were chosen as sandikin, but whose wives were not with them, go themselves to bring the child from the parturient. But he | Maharil |

76 CHAPTER TWO was careful. When he was once a sandek and his wife was not with him, he com-

manded that the child should be brought to him at the synagogue. For it is the way of women to catch onto the cloth of the one entering the birthing chamber to bring the child and escort him to the commandment [of circumcision]. And he |Maharil] said: If Maharam was careful that a woman not enter the men’s section, among the men, he | Maharam]| also was [careful] that a man not enter among the women, as the more one distances himself from women, the better it is.5°

It is clear from this passage that the Maharam’s ruling forbidding women to serve as ba’alot brit in the synagogue had become commonly accepted by the late fourteenth century, although we might read the repetition of the prohibition as a sign of continuing tension around this issue.°? This source identifies gendered spaces filled with tensions. ‘The space of birth, the birthing chamber, was women’s space. Maharil suggests (and attributes his suggestion to Maharam’s [R. Meir’s] instructions) that men should avoid entering this space; he also reports the difficulties encountered by men who do enter this women’s space. The synagogue, or at least the men’s section in the synagogue, is clearly men’s space, and women were not to be admitted. This idea of two gendered spaces, the Kindbetterin’s room and the synagogue, and the tensions linked with them in the context of the circumcision ceremony, is evident in a passage from Sefer Leket Yosher, the fitteenth-century book by R. Joseph b. Moses (1423-1490). He reports one incident in which these tensions became unbearable: Once there was a circumcision and the women were delayed in coming to the synagogue and a prominent [rich] man was the ba’al brit . . . and he said to the rich man: “Sit at my house.” And when the women arrived at the synagogue with the infant he sent the shammes to the women |and said]: “Stand there and wait for us for as long as we have been waiting for you.” And the women stood reproached until everyone knew of their foul deed, and the whole community thanked him with the exception of one scholar who said that it was an insult to the child, and that they [the women] should have been punished differently.”°

In conclusion, while many scholars have pointed to R. Meir’s restriction of women’s role in the circumcision ceremony, few have attempted to specity what this role actually was and to follow the arguments conducted around it. The study of the role of the ba’alat brit, utilizing the variety of sources that refer to it, rather than merely the prohibition as it appears in Sefer Tashbez, brings to light a complex social setting and the tensions it contained. When examining the ba’alat brit in the context of the circumcision ritual as a whole, and not just as an aspect of female religious activity, this change takes on a new mean-

ing. The role of the ba’alei brit was of great importance in the medieval circumcision ritual, as was that of co-parents in the baptism ritual. This change in women’s roles evokes a context much wider than that of circumcision.”! We

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 7/ will now turn to examine one last figure, the mother of the infant, before addressing this more general context. THE MOTHER

One figure is remarkable in her absence from all the sources examined to this point —the mother of the newborn. Aside from a comment in a fourteenthcentury source regarding her ineligibility in deciding who would be the ba’al brit,’* she has not been mentioned.”*? We must ask where she was and what part she took in the circumcision ceremony. The source that describes the mother’s presence most explicitly is also one of the latest sources included in our discussion. R. Jacob Mulin reports that the mother remained at home. He discusses the ba’al/at brit, who “takes the infant from the parturient to bring him to the synagogue.” ”* The fact that the mother remained at home is also noted in other fitteenth- and sixteenth-century sources, some of which will be discussed in the next chapter.”? One must ask, however, whether the parturient stayed at home throughout the Middle Ages or whether this was a late medieval change. The descriptions of the circumcision ceremony that appear in the Gaonic sources as well as in Mahzor Vitry mention that it was customary to let the mother drink from the wine that was blessed during the ceremony. ‘This custom was often accompanied by another custom—the sprinkling of wine on the infant. In Gaonic times, these actions were preceded by two blessings in Aramaic for the health of mother and child.”° The Ashkenazic sources report sprinkling the child with wine, and some sources report letting the mother drink from the wine, but these Aramaic prayers were no longer recited.?’ Additional Ashkenazic sources

from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries also mention the mother drinking from the wine. From the description of the ceremony proceedings, it seems that the mother drank from the wine at more or less the same time as the baby was sprinkled with it. The description of the ceremony does not ditterentiate between her and the baby receiving the wine. This would seem to imply that

she was present at the ceremony and that a change occurred between the twelfth century, when Mahzor Vitry was compiled, and the fifteenth century, when the Maharil spoke of the mother being at home. An alternative solution might be that the wine was brought to the mother at home. Many of the sources state that the wine was sent to the mother, using the verb leshager.?® R. Jacob the Circumciser says the wine is sent to the mother (lishloah).”? Both of these verbs could refer to the sending of the cup to the women’s section or, alternatively, out of the synagogue. ‘The Maharil’s book of customs, for example, quotes R. Isaac Or Zaru’a and says that the cup is sent to the mother; we know that the custom in the period of the Maharil was that the woman remain at home.!°° This argument is strengthened by another halakhic issue. There is a discussion in the sources of what to do with wine used for circumcision ceremonies that took place on fast days.'0!

78 CHAPTER TWO In such cases, the wine was saved until after the fast. This points to an accepted practice of drinking the wine, even if not necessarily in conjunction with the

ceremony. It is hard to choose between this reconstruction of the situation and the possibility that the mother was present and drank the wine in the synagogue. !97

Another issue related to the question of the mother’s presence at the circumcision ceremony is that of ritual purity. Parturient women were ritually impure after birth. Some comments made in the literature that has reached us from Rashi’s students mention that ritually impure women chose not to attend synagogue. Rashi himself, however, emphasizes that women who act in this way are especially pious and, moreover, that there is no reason for women who are ritually impure to refrain from coming to the synagogue.!"* In addition, the impurity of birth is ditterent from other ritual impurities. Certainly, until the end of the thirteenth century, women who gave birth to a son were not considered ritually impure after a week. As Rashi explains, the circumcision ceremony was held on the eighth day because on that day the mother was no longer impure and could rejoice with her husband.!°? This custom changed at the end of the thirteenth century, when women started observing a longer period of impurity — forty days in the case of a boy.!°* Thus, purity practices prevalent until the late thirteenth century would have posed no barrier to mothers’ attendance at synagogue circumcision ceremonies. The evidence reviewed here is not conclusive, and it is impossible to determine the whereabouts of the mother with certainty. I would suggest that it is probable that mothers were present at the ceremony in many cases, at least until the end of the thirteenth century or the early fourteenth century. At that time, a number of changes took place: The ba’alat brit lost her active role, and, according to some of the sources, the giving of wine to the mother at the ceremony became a less integral part of the ritual; in some cases, it was not even mentioned. ‘These developments correspond to a growing observance of a longer period of impurity after birth!°° as well as to a medical trend that advocated lengthening the lying-in period.!?° In conclusion, our search for the mother during the ceremony revealed that the end of the thirteenth century was a time of change. Viewed together with the change in the role of the ba’alat brit, as well as in the permissibility of women acting as circumcisers that we saw earlier in this chapter, these issues seem to point to larger changes occurring in medieval Ashkenazic society. THE COMMUNITY

The only participants in the ceremony that have not yet been discussed are the members of the community, the kahal, who took part in the ritual. As scholars have noted, the congregation was extremely important in the medieval ritual, and the ceremony usually took place immediately after the morning prayers. One can assume that the congregation was composed of the same group of peo-

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 79 ple that participated in the morning prayers. The task of the participants was to respond to the verses recited by the father and the circumciser and to serve as a welcoming committee. These same people also participated in the two feasts — one the night before, and the other on the afternoon following the ritual. The blessing chanted by the community, “as he has entered the covenant, so may he enter Torah, the wedding canopy and good deeds,” symbolizes both the public aspects of the ritual and the connection between the circumcision and the baby’s future life. If the blessing for a lite of fulfillment of the commandments or the performance of good deeds is not connected to any specific stage of life, the other two blessings evoke two further status changes the boy will undergo — first, when he begins studying ‘Torah and becomes part of the male world and, later, when he gets married. The community thus represents the society the infant will belong to, and presents, through the blessing, the stages of life the child will pass through in order to become a full member of the congregation. The community in the synagogue is certainly the male community. There were probably a fair number of women at the ceremony as well — both because some women attended daily services and because such a celebration certainly drew others who did not attend daily. Sources from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries suggest that some of the women remained at home with the parturi-

ent and that a celebration took place there while the men were in the synagogue. If, however, we accept the logic suggested in the previous sections of this chapter, it would follow that in periods when women had a larger role in the ritual, more would have been present in the synagogue.

CIRCUMCISION AND BapTIsM: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS

At this point, we may assemble the ditferent pieces of the previous discussion. What similarities and differences can be revealed by comparing the Ashkenazic circumcision ceremony to the baptism rituals conducted by the Jews’ Christian neighbors? How do they help us understand medieval Jewish social and ritual practices? There are many points of similarity between the circumcision ritual and the ritual of baptism: the white clothes worn by the infant; the carrying of the baby to and from the ceremony by a figure/figures other than the infant’s parents; the importance attributed to the role of co-parents/ba’alei brit; the meals prepared before and after the circumcision ritual; and the washing of the infant and his preparation for the ritual. Even if, in some cases, these actions are ancient components of the ceremony, they took on new meanings in the medieval context, when a person was assigned especially to perform them. In other cases, we find new functions arising in the medieval circumcision ritual, such as that of the ba’alei brit. While we can expect any rite of initiation to involve persons who help and accompany the initiate, here we find

30 CHAPTER TWO shared features on many levels. For this reason, they require more detailed explanation. The most apparent parallel in the two rituals is that between the ba’alei brit and the co-parents. This is also the most novel role within the medieval Ashkenazic community. Moreover, from a halakhic point of view, this role was not an essential component of the ritual. The ba’al brit was far less integral to the ritual than the baby, the circumciser, or the father who is commanded to circumcise his son. Hence, the roles of the ba’alei brit compared to those of the co-parents will be at the core of our discussion. This comparison is suggested by the medieval sources themselves, in their

choice of the term ba’al brit. As noted, this term is used in twelfth- and thirteenth-century sources, only to be replaced with the term sandek in late medieval and early modern texts. There are two other terms used in conjunction with these terms. R. Moses of Zurich explains that the sandek is the ba’al brit who is the conpére.'°” A different source, from fifteenth-century Germany, explains: “the ba’al brit, who is called compére and in my country gevatter.”!°5 These comments, using the vernacular term for the Latin compater as alternative terms for ba’alei brit, recount the terms the Jews used daily for this task.'°? Joseph Lynch, who investigated medieval co-parenthood in great depth, has commented on the vernacular and Latin forms of the terms. Arsuing that the social function of co-parenthood was the most important, he has suggested that the terms compater, commater, and, compaternitas convey the importance of the spiritual parents acting together with the biological parents.!!° The Hebrew term ba’al brit conveys a similar idea, as the ba’al brit acts together with the person who is commanded to perform the circumcision, the father of the infant. Over the past two decades, medievalists have turned their attention to the role of co-parents and especially to their social function. The work of anthropologists such as Eric Wolf and Sidney Mintz, mentioned at the beginning of

this chapter, who studied contemporary co-parenthood practices in Latin America forty years ago, has also been central in historians’ attempts at understanding medieval practices.'!! We will now investigate to what extent these explanations can be applied to medieval Jewish communities. As mentioned at the outset of this chapter, one of the spiritual obligations the co-parents took upon themselves when sponsoring a child at baptism was the religious education of the godchildren. Despite the focus in ecclesiastical writings on the importance of co-parents as spiritual counselors and guides, this does not seem to have been the emphasis medieval Christians placed on the role.!!? In any event, this understanding of co-parenthood has almost no parallel in Jewish sources. While the ba’al brit was supposed to be a “good Jew,” as R. Isaac b. Moses states,'!* there is no discussion of any future obligation of the ba’alei brit toward the infant. This accords with another central difference between Christian and Jewish

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 3] practice. While incest laws restricted co-parents’ future relationships with the child they sponsored and his or her descendants, no such laws existed in the Jewish framework. From the Carolingian period onward, church authorities emphasized time and again that co-parents could not be relatives and that they could not be married in the future. As for Jewish society, we have no medieval registrar to inform us whether, as a rule, this honor was accorded to relatives or friends. From the rather sporadic accounts of circumcision ceremonies and their participants, however, I would suggest that both possibilities existed in Jewish reality. Although the parents of the baby were never ba’alei brit, grandparents and relatives were often ba’alei brit, as were friends. Since it was customary not to honor the same people as ba’alei brit for two children of the same parents, it is of course possible that any family with more than one son, or per-

haps more than two sons, could distribute the honors to both family and friends,!!* This ditference between Jewish and Christian practices raises further questions. The first is why the Jewish institution of co-parenthood did not include the marriage restrictions that were part of the corresponding Christian institution of co-parenthood. The answer seems to be both social and ideological. From a practical point of view, in the medieval European world, Jews lived in small communities, often founded by a handful of families. Imposing such a restriction would have been nearly impossible. In addition, while medieval Christianity in general was marked by the development and expansion of restrictions on incest and marriage, medieval Judaism was not.!!? Thus, these

ditferences between Jewish ba’alei brit and Christian co-parenthood were probably reflective of wider issues, which were only incidental to co-parenting ba’alei brit and the significance of each in the two communities.!!® Recently historians studying co-parenthood in medieval Christian society have emphasized the social implications of sponsorship. They have suggested two main ways of understanding the function of co-parents. John Bossy has suggested that the role of co-parenthood was meant to mediate violence and aggression within medieval society. The connection forged between the natural parents of the baby and the co-parents neutralized tensions that might otherwise have been displayed in ways harmful to society. Ties of co-parents, forged between men and women of different social classes who were very unlikely to intermarry, facilitated more amicable relationships.''’ Bossy emphasized the cordial gestures that accompanied the ritual — the giving of a gift to the infant as well as the hosting of a meal by the co-parents. He also dwelt at length on the prohibitions that accompanied the honor. He was especially interested in the incest restrictions that such a connection introduced, and his analysis focused on the social-class ditferences between the co-parents and the natural parents. Bossy’s approach is characteristic of a school of thought that sees ritual as a means of neutralizing tensions and fostering greater harmony within society.'!® The biological parents and the co-parents reached a higher level of

82 CHAPTER TWO athnity than they would have otherwise, while the restrictions that applied to this feeling of kinship helped supported the broader social hierarchy. Over the past decade, another historian, Bernhard Jussen, has also dealt extensively with medieval sponsorship and baptism. Jussen has suggested that the ties of co-parents were not meant to reduce violence so much as to promote friendship. While his explanation is not very different from that of Bossy, he concentrates on how co-parenthood served political and strategic needs. He compares the understandings of co-parenthood and biological parenthood in medieval sources, suggesting that co-parenthood was both an expression of friendship and a means of gaining social status. As he says: “Sponsorship could either provide an official framework for useful relationships that already existed in practice or create such practically useful relationships in the first place.”!!? The work of Bossy and of Jussen is based to a large extent on Wolt’s and Mintz’s work on co-parenthood (compadrazgo) in Puerto Rico. Wolf and Mintz revealed different methods for distributing the honor of co-parenthood. Wolf, who studied middle-class society, found that parents chose to honor others of a higher social status. In this way, they hoped to protect themselves from future mishaps with more powertul persons, while furthering their relationships with people of higher social status. Mintz studied a poorer social group and discovered that they tended to honor close friends and even relatives (despite the religious restrictions), in order to strengthen their ties with their immediate surroundings. This poorer group believed that, in times of difficulties, only immediate family and friends could be trusted.!7° Let us now apply these insights to the specific context of the medieval Jewish communities. As other research has shown, the small communities Jews lived in were often fraught with tensions. Honoring another member of the community might have been a declaration of allegiance or an attempt to make contact with a future partner. In a close-knit minority society, such as the medieval Jewish communities, the pattern outlined by Mintz, in which the immediate family and neighbors were most valued, seems to best explain the social practice. Nevertheless, the ditferences between Jewish and Christian practices concerning the honoring of family members do raise questions concerning the function of ba’alei brit and problematize the borrowing of the anthropological interpretations suggested for medieval Christian society. While one could perhaps argue that the honoring of friends as ba’alei brit was part of the biological parents’ networking and social-contact strategies, what was the social meaning of the honoring of grandparents and especially grandfathers as ba’alei brit? What function did honoring parents serve within the Jewish framework? Bossy and Jussen pointed to the importance of co-parenthood in promoting goodwill and friendship in the often tense and violent urban environment. If we ignore the subject of violence within the Jewish community (which requires further research) and concentrate on the locus of families within the

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 33 Jewish community, we must ask: What tensions existed that the institution of ba’alei brit could alleviate? How could honoring a member of the family help in these situations? Before answering these questions, we will compare the honor of serving as a ba’al brit to other honors distributed at rituals. ‘This will improve our understanding of the role of the ba’al brit within Jewish society. Furthermore, in order to understand the tensions that were part of the workings of family dynamics, we cannot ignore the place of women in the circumcision ceremony. The changes in this area certainly attest both to the importance of the role of the ba’alei brit and to the social tensions surrounding it. By considering these ditterent factors, I will try to explicate the function of the ba’alei brit in a comparative context. Marriage Marriage, as an agreement arranged by the parents of the bride and groom, was the ultimate attempt of families to coordinate alliances and cooperate financially in the premodern world. This was the case in both Jewish and Christian society.!*! Thus, an understanding of the workings of the marriage ceremony can help us understand the function of the ba’alei brit in the circumcision ceremony as well. As in the circumcision ceremony, we find descriptions of the marriage ceremony along with instructions for its proper procedure already in the Mishna and the Talmud. As in the circumcision ritual, Jewish marriage rites underwent

change throughout the centuries.'** Unlike the role of the ba’al brit, which was newly introduced in the medieval period, the role of the shushvin is well known from the Mishna, the Talmud, and various Midrashim.!** The shushvin, a role that some scholars have compared with the ba’al brit or the co-parents, provides a good example of some of these changes.!**+ The shushvin was a figure whose task it was to help make the match between the bride’s and the grooms families. In ancient times he also contributed, to a certain extent, to the financial standing of the young couple. In earlier sources, the shushvin played a number of roles: He gave the couple a gift, was an authority on all claims against the bride’s virginity, and took part in the ceremony as well as in synagogue rituals on the Sabbath preceding the wedding. The shushvinim are mentioned in twelfth- and thirteenth-century sources. There were usually two shushvinim, one from each side. They escorted the groom to the wedding ritual and were honored along with him on the Sabbath before the wedding, when they were called to the Torah.!*? The medieval sources do not provide any reference to their involvement in virginity claims, nor is there significant mention of financial involvement.!° I have not found any evidence that might determine who the shushvin was —a relative or friend. Moreover, unlike the case of the ba’alei brit, we find no mention of complaints

34 CHAPTER TWO that a promise to serve as shushvin was violated. In one Ashkenazic source, however, we find the ba’al brit mentioned alongside the shushvin. The author ot Sefer Hasidim says: Once a Hasid was asked to be a ba’al brit and to be a shushvin for a groom. He said to those who asked him: You would be better off buying yourself friends. Ask others and they will love you and I will consider it as if you had asked me.!’

This source equates the two figures, as well as the honor of serving as a ba’al brit or shushvin. In both cases, the bestowal of the honor was considered a way to “buy friends.” This interpretation seems to support Bossy’s and Jussen’s suggestions as to the function of the co-parents/ba’alei brit.!7° We are still left with the difference between Jewish and Christian practice in bestowing the honor of ba’alei brit/co-parents on relatives. Even if we explain this ditference, as I did before, as the result of differing Jewish and Christian understandings of incest, we must still determine the social function of having a grandparent serve as a ba’al brit. | would suggest that this may be linked to developments in the medieval marriage ceremony. The twelfth and thirteenth centuries saw the emergence of new strategies of

marriage negotiation in Ashkenazic society. One of the most noticeable changes was related to the monetary payments made by the families of the groom and the bride. Kleventh-century records show that marriage was an arrangement in which money changed hands. Up until the mid-thirteenth century, only the woman’s family advanced money before marriage, in the form of a dowry, whereas the groom’s family committed itself to funding by way

of the sum promised in the ketubbah. A new ruling that originated in the twelfth century enhanced the position of the bride’s family. Previously, once the marriage was contracted, the money was transferred to the husband’s family, and, even if the bride died the day after the wedding, the money was not returned. [In the twelfth century, a new ruling became accepted, whereby if the bride passed away within the first two years of marriage and no children had been born to the couple, the money was returned to the bride’s family.!*” In the mid-thirteenth century, double marriage payments seem to have become standard; thus, not only the bride’s family, but also the groom’s family, contributed to the young couple’s economic position. Some scholars have suggested that this double marriage payment became necessary because the Jewish economy relied so heavily on moneylending. The new ruling was that if the bride or the groom passed away either before the birth of oftspring or before two years had passed, the monies were returned to the respective families.1°° Although we have little information on this process, some of the issues regarding changes in marriage agreements are relevant to an understanding of the forces at work in the circumcision ceremony.!*! This change in the dowry system was a response to existing social tensions; however, it also produced new frictions that the society had to cope with. I sug-

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 85 gest that the role of ba’alei brit served to ease some of the tensions such negotiations must have generated. When honoring a family member or a friend, Jews were practicing what anthropologists have called “reproductive politics.” As anthropologists such as Karen and Mark Paige have shown, ceremonies such as circumcision and baptism are often extensions of marriage rituals and can carry over tensions between the maternal and paternal families from the time of marriage to a later stage in the life of a couple.'** In medieval Jewish reality, the birth of a baby was the awaited outcome of all marriages. For young couples having their first children, the circumcision ritual was the first ritual after the marriage ceremony, if the firstborn was the coveted and hoped-for son. It was an opportunity for the hierarchy to proclaim its position. It is in this light that I propose that one of the keys to the social practice of having family members serve as ba’alei brit is linked to marriage arrangements in medieval Jewish communities.!*° Women’s Participation and Exclusion

In order to enhance this understanding, we must also examine the changes concerning the place of women in the ritual, emphasized in the first part of this chapter. In the response concerning the father whose mother and motherin-law argued over the right to serve as ba’alat habrit, the justification provided

for the choice of the paternal grandmother is the biblical commandment of honoring one’s parent. As we have already seen, in all cases, the paternal choice was considered the most important.!** Not only when deciding which parent to honor, but also in the case where the mother designated a ba’al brit of her choice who was not a relative, it was the father who decided, and the mother’s appointment was invalid. The importance of the paternal family in this situation is striking. Although the patriarchal nature of Jewish society provides some explanation, nonetheless, this point requires further investigation. Why is the paternal family emphasized, and how does this connect to the ultimate exclusion of women from participation? In the circumcision ritual, the families of the infant saw the connection they established in principle at the time of the marriage become actual. If the cou-

ple had a daughter, they of course would not conduct this ceremony, but in the case of the birth of a son, the circumcision ritual bestowed honor on others, and the paternal and maternal families once again asserted their relationship and status. In Jewish society, where children married young, and marriages were often arranged for them at an even younger age, circumcision was an event in which the couple was recognized as an independent unit with children of their own, and the connection between the families was reconfirmed and restated. It seems significant that changes in marriage agreements occurred during the same period in which the role of the ba’al brit becomes significant. Dur-

86 CHAPTER TWO ing this period, the paternal family, in fact, lost some of its previous power with respect to marriage agreements. I would suggest that we see here a symbolic reaction to this loss of power. While the maternal family demanded more for

their daughters, some areas in which women had enjoyed relative freedom, such as the ritual front, were becoming more restricted. The tensions around the circumcision ceremony and the honor of ba’al brit reflect some of the strains that existed between the paternal and maternal families. The ritual honors granted to the paternal family compensated somewhat for the loss of their previous position. The change in women’s ritual experience connects in an additional way to “reproductive politics.” Paige and Paige have argued that in patriarchal societies, rituals convey not only the communities’ commitment to the infant, but also serve to display the place of women in society and the rights granted her.!*”

If the function of the ba’al brit was to assert hierarchy, then the changes in women’s roles reflect the struggles in this hierarchy. These struggles not only define the place of women (and their offspring) but also provide us with a prism of the society as a whole. As circumcision is an institutional practice, the social statement made by the performance of the ritual serves to reinforce its social message.!*©

Mary Douglas has also discussed rituals and change in similar contexts, placing special emphasis on the role of women. She suggested that conceptions of

purity and impurity often underlie gender relationships and attitudes toward women within society.'*’ While the participation of women in the circumcision ritual in the synagogue is not directly related to purity, their presence or lack of presence in the synagogue reflects prevalent gender interactions.!*® [t is in the ba’alat brit’s function that the clearest change can be seen. While in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries (and perhaps even earlier), she is especially active — washing the baby, bringing him to the synagogue, holding him on her lap in the synagogue — after the thirteenth century, she was absent from

the men’s section during the ceremony. One must ask which part of this description represents the norm? Was it unusual for women to participate so actively in a ceremony at the synagogue or was the exclusion of women the exception to the rule? When discussing the ba’alat brit earlier in the chapter, a central source dealt with R. Meir of Rothenburg’s attempt to bar women from serving as ba’alot brit.!*? It is not surprising that this source, which tells us much about women’s roles, is the source in which the practice was eliminated. By contrast, other references to the ba’alat brit, trom the period after the practice was abolished, simply mention the ba’alat brit as the wife of the ba’al brit and provide few details. This is not extraordinary, since the role was no longer of great import. If the

husband was chosen to be the ba’al brit, his wife automatically became the ba’alat brit. [ have argued that this change in women’s role in the circumcision ceremony

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 57 reflects tensions between families. However, it reflects additional tensions in society as well. The presence of women in the male section of the synagogue, an unusual occurrence in medieval Ashkenaz, must be further explained. One reason for the active participation of women in the circumcision ceremony could be the nature of this specific ceremony. While it is a male ceremony, it is one that takes place while the infant is completely in his mother’s care. In this aspect, the ritual differs from other rituals in which the initiate does not return to the same social space he left. In Ashkenaz, for example, Jewish boys who underwent the Torah initiation ceremony became part of a new social space, that of the male community. In the case of an infant, he was under the supervision of his mother both before and after the circumcision ritual. This factor, though it may account for female involvement in the ritual, does not explain the objections to women’s participation or the changes in the ritual through time. It seems that the best way to assess the change in the role of women in the ceremony is by examining R. Meir of Rothenburg’s objections to this role. He mentions two main reasons: First, he says that it is inappropriate for women who are dressed and adorned with jewels to enter the men’s section. Once again, we must ask what made this particularly inappropriate at this time, as we can assume that previously, female ba’alot brit entered the men’s section adorned with jewels. In general, immodesty is an argument often marshaled to restrict women’s activities in patriarchal societies. One has only to look at religious societies today to see living examples of this use of immodesty. It is important, however, to note the limits of this struggle. The objection is not to women’s wearing of jewelry per se, but to their doing so in the men’s section, where they could unintentionally cause men’s thoughts to wander. Second, he explains that the commandment of circumcision is the father’s obligation and not that of women, and that women should not “snatch” the commandment from the men. The expression he uses “/ahtof mizvah” (to snatch the commandment) is one that is not common in the medieval sources. It appears in the Talmud as well as in the Midrash in a completely different context, one far more positive than the context here.'*? The idea that a man, rather than a woman, should hold the baby makes sense if we think of the ritual as a male ceremony, a ceremony in which the baby becomes part of male society, even if only for a few short minutes. This would explain the importance of a man’s holding of the infant. But this kind of explanation only increases our ditficulties in understanding why women were allowed to be such active participants for a limited period of time. [ suggest that the context of R. Meir of Rothenburg’s comment is far wider than that of the role of the ba’alat brit. What does R. Meir of Rothenburg mean when he accuses women of “snatching the commandment”? Clearly, one meaning of his comment is that women are taking over an area that is not meant for them. The barring of women from the circumcision ceremony alerts

35 CHAPTER TWO us to examine women’s participation in ritual more extensively. We find that the case before us is not a unique one. In the eleventh, and especially in the twelfth, centuries, there is evidence that some women took upon themselves obligations that were traditionally male, such as time-bound commandments (Mizvot aseh shehazman grama) that only men are commanded to observe — among them, the donning of teft/lin (phylacteries) and zizit (the ritual fringed garment). This practice was not supported by all in Ashkenaz, but was generally approval by figures such as R. Tam. During the course of the thirteenth century, the Hebrew sources begin to express discomfort with women’s adoption of such practices, and the objections become more prevalent.!*! R. Meir of Rothenburg was one of the main figures objecting to women taking upon themselves some of these obligations.'*? The objections to women performing a variety of ritual activities — ba’alot brit, tefillin, and zizit—as well as the question of the kind of blessing they were allowed to make when performing the rituals, were all widely discussed during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. While R. Tam allowed women to make the ritual blessing men made when performing these activities, fifty years later the permission he had given was being questioned.!** During the second half of the thirteenth century and the fourteenth century, these objections became more forceful.!*+ Another example of an objection to women’s performance of ritual functions was discussed above —the objection to women acting as circumcisers, which became accepted in the fourteenth century. This change seems to fit the development I am describing. In addition, as we discussed above, a more stringent approach toward impurity after birth was adopted at this time. These separate instances of objections to women’s ritual participation, specifically in areas that are not traditionally female, seem to point to a broader social phenomenon. Even if each issue has its own inner logic and halakhic reasoning, the ensemble seems to be connected to a more general attitude toward women and ritual participation. The restrictions on women’s participation in public ritual as well as in their private devotion are evidence of a gender struggle within medieval Jewish society. These restrictions also accord with the struggle between the bride’s and the groom’s families, as well as changes that seem to have been part and parcel of the marriage economy of the time. The reality in Jewish society fits in with the European context as well. A similar development is evident in Christian society, where, following a period of relative religious treedom for women, as is evident in the growth of lay piety and female orders in the twelfth century, church authorities of the thirteenth century were determined to curb women’s

opportunities and especially their religious functions. Thus, for example, women who tried to preach were gravely reproached. Many of their religious practices, including fasting and other devotions, were criticized.'*? Women did continue to act as co-mothers, but as women had always played a more significant role in the baptism rite, this fact is not related to the restriction of re-

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 39 cently obtained freedoms. These restrictions on women’s ritual participation have a distinct parallel in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century discussions of

children’s ritual obligations. The appendix to this chapter outlines these changes as they deviate from the focus of chapter 2, but are central to a broader understanding of this topic.

Let us now return to the opening discussion of the co-parents and the ba’alei brit and summarize some of the issues raised in this chapter. The medieval Jewish community adapted the role of the ba’alei brit from their Christian neighbors. Like the Christians, they used it as a means of forming new relationships and strengthening existing contacts. Within the family framework, they chose to honor various members, in accordance with the status of the different members of their families. Among those honored were women — friends and relatives — just as women were honored as co-mothers in the baptism ceremony. By examining these practices, we may obtain a better understanding of the tensions at work within Jewish society. As an institutional ritual, circumcision was a way for the community to strengthen and confirm its hierarchy. By following the development of this institutional rite during the medieval period, we can see how it reflects changes and tensions within Jewish society. Jewish

women, like Christian women in the baptism ritual, took part in the circumcision ceremony. Their role is more surprising because, unlike baptism that was for female and male infants alike, circumcision was seen by many as an exclusively male rite.

By examining changes in the roles of women, we were able to point to a wider change in their ritual participation in Jewish society, as well as the broader transformations that were part of European society at large. The similarities between Jewish society and Christian society with respect to these two rites of passage are especially striking when one remembers that both ceremonies were definitive religious ceremonies. Although they were the ultimate symbol of ditterence, they reflect similar social strategies and changes.

Appendix

RITUAL OBLIGATIONS OF CHILDREN: CHANGING CONCEPTIONS

As we have seen in this chapter, the thirteenth century was a period in which women’s ritual participation underwent substantial change. Figures such as R. Meir of Rothenburg were central in promoting this change and many of his recommendations were forcefully endorsed and gradually accepted. The chapter has focused on explaining some of these changes, first and foremost those concerning the circumcision ceremony. However, as we have seen, many of these issues have broader implications and contexts. One such example of a broader context that is central to this book’s topic, although to a later stage of life, has to do with male children’s ritual obligations. The obligations were discussed in the context of boys who were on the verge of or already at the age of education — ages five, six, or seven. Because these children have been studied extensively over the past years and because they are not included in the categories defined for this project, they will not be discussed at length.'*° However, awareness of the changes young children’s ritual obligations were subject to enhances the historical conclusions of this study as well. This appendix will summarize conclusions of previous research. In the medieval Jewish communities the question of how to educate children and what religious responsibilities they were to take upon themselves was a charged one. As a general trend one can see that during the course of the thirteenth century certain responsibilities were emphasized more and more as exclusively adult male responsibilities. During the thirteenth century, there are a number of instances in which the scholars debate the age at which children were obligated to perform certain duties. At this time, these obligations, required of all upon reaching age thirteen, were often taken on by children of younger ages, according to their abilities. Most of the obligations in question are traditionally male. During the second half of the thirteenth century and during the fourteenth century, understandings of these obligations changed. While a thorough examination of this development is beyond the scope of this appendix, I will cite one example to illustrate this point. The precept of phylacteries, tefillin, worn on the arm during morning prayers, was not one that depended on the age of a child. Rather, tefillin were given to boys who were able to take care of them and to control their bodily functions. While eleventh- and twelfth-century scholars discuss boys not yet in school as donning tefillin,!*” thirteenth-century sources discuss tefillin in the context of boys

CIRCUMCISION AND BAPTISM 91 who have started formal education. Yet there is a new twist to this discussion in the middle of the thirteenth century. R. Meir of Rothenburg emphasizes that only boys who can control their bodily functions and their thoughts may wear tefillin. These youngsters are defined as boys who have already received a formal education and even reached age thirteen.!*° This became standard practice in Ashkenaz, and by the fifteenth century, some even went so far as to say only married men should wear teffilin.'*? It would seem that a reevaluation of this religious obligation was taking place and that the age of taking on this precept was being raised. This is true of other religious obligations as well, such as having a child count as the tenth man needed for a minyan, a quorum, to pray in public.!°° A somewhat parallel process in medieval Christian society has been outlined by scholars, most recently in the work of Kathryn Taglia. Taglia has discussed

the evolution of communion and confirmation in France from part of the process of infant initiation to separate rites and has noted that during the thirteenth century communion was delayed to adolescence and was not held at age seven as was previously accepted.!?! Nicholas Orme has argued that this process went on in England as well, especially in regard to practices concerning confession and communion.!?? While the nature of observance of Jewish and Christian religious obligations was different, it would seem that a parallel process was taking place in both societies. Even more important, during this same period, a reevaluation of women’s responsibilities and participation was taking place. As we saw in this chapter, in the context of the same issue, tefillin, the same scholar R. Meir, and those who followed him, had new things to say about women and the precept. This case is different from that of male children since tefillin was not a female precept and women who wore tefillin were the exception, not the rule. However, during the Middle Ages, specifically in Ashkenaz, some women took this precept upon themselves. During the second half of the thirteenth century, sharp criticism of this practice was voiced and over time these objections became the norm. We have seen additional examples of such changes as well.!?* This attitude toward women’s religious roles also has some parallel in medieval Christian society. I would suggest that this change of attitude toward both child and female participation in observances should perhaps be seen not as two separate issues, but rather as part of a whole. In Jewish society the religious responsibilities that had previously been those of young males and of some women came to be reserved for adult male society. I will return to this issue in the conclusions.

Chapter Three ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS R. Judah said: Three persons require guarding, namely a sick person, a bride groom, and a bride.

Rashi: “A sick person: For his luck has turned bad and as a result the demons torment him. And also a woman who gives birth.”

— Berakhot 54b and Rashi

ALTHOUGH THE CIRCUMCISION RITUAL was the central birth rite celebrated in

medieval Jewish society, it was not the only one. Circumcision was part of a ritual sequence that was designed both to usher the newborn into the community and to protect the baby from harm. This chapter will examine three birth ceremonies customary in the medieval Ashkenazic world: the Hollekreisch, the Wachnacht, and the Sabbath when the parturient first left her house (Shabbat Yeziat haYoledet). The exact details of these three ceremonies are not well known, as they are not treated as extensively as the circumcision ceremony. Indeed, they are only hinted at in sources from the High Middle Ages and are described in greater detail only in fitteenth-century documents. Moreover, unlike the previous discussion of the circumcision ritual and baptism, the Jewish rituals and their Christian parallels examined in this chapter were not an ancient or essential part of Jewish or Christian practice, nor did they determine Jewish and Christian identity. The differences between circumcision and baptism, on the one hand, and the rituals examined in this chapter, on the other, will enrich our analysis of the comparable elements in the ceremonies and provide a fuller understanding of the attitudes and beliefs about birth. The Hollekreisch and Wachnacht rituals were ceremonies for the infant, and they will be discussed in the first part of the chapter. The Sabbath ritual was a ceremony for the mother after birth. However, since this ceremony is linked to the Hollekreisch, and since the analysis of this ritual increases our understanding of the ritual process of birth, I have included it in the discussion in the second part of this chapter. All three rituals will be compared to parallel Christian practices. The chapter will conclude with a summary discussion of the ritual birth process as a whole, as described in this chapter and in the preceding one.

ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS 93 HOLLEKREISCH

This ritual, in which the infant was given a non-Jewish name, was customary for both boys and girls. In the case of boys, this name was in addition to the one given the baby at the circumcision ceremony. In the case of girls, no other naming ritual is mentioned in the sources. A ceremony called Hollekreisch is referred to in sources from the fifteenth century, such as the writings of R. Moses Mintz (1415-—1483).' According to his description, the ceremony took place

on the Sabbath on which the parturient first left the house. During the Hollekreisch ceremony, a number of children — girls for a girl, boys for a boy — gathered around the intant’s cradle. The baby was litted up and the participants recited a number of verses from the liturgy and the scriptures, especially the verses of Isaac’s blessing of Jacob (Gen. 27), and then called out “Holle, Holle, what will this baby be named?” This was recited three times and, finally, the baby was given his/her name. Then cakes were served (figures 5a and 5b).? Despite the fact that this ceremony, known by the name of Hollekreisch, appears only in sources from the fifteenth century and later, some earlier sources describe a custom that shares many aspects of the Hollekreisch. The earliest reference to such a ceremony can be found in Mahzor Vitry: It is a custom that at a convenient time, shortly after the circumcision ceremony, ten [men] gather. And they take a Pentateuch. And the little one is in the cradle dressed like on the day of his circumcision ceremony in grandeur. And they place a book on him and say “let this one [the boy| keep what is written in this [the Pentateuch].” And he says: “May God give you of the dew of heaven” |Gen. 27:2829] and all the verses of blessings until “and only then you will be successful” | Josh. 1:8]. And they put a quill and ink in his hand so that he will be a scribe, adept in the Torah of God.t

While this custom is not identical with the Hollekreisch custom, it does contain some similar elements. ‘This ceremony, like the Hollekreisch ceremony, took place around the baby’s cradle and the verses recited during this ritual were the same as those recited during the Hollekreisch ceremony. However, in contrast to the Hollekreisch ritual, there is no mention of children participating in the ceremony or of any name-giving procedure. This custom, as it appears in Mahzor Vitry, is reminiscent of a custom practiced in Christian Furope. In order to protect children from demons and harmful elements, it was customary to place a New Testament in the baby’s cradle under his head. The belief was that the Holy Scriptures could both chase away any evil spirits and ensure a bright future for the newborn.’ The custom of gathering around the cradle that appears in Mahzor Vitry has parallels in other contemporary sources. The author of Sefer Hasidim tells of a similar practice: ““This is the record of Adam’s line’ [Gen. 5:1]: From this we learn that they put the boy in a cradle and give him a name and place the book

ai lt ee : i

ae so! ‘at, rat eh |B ‘ . weet ee uk * diabeaae “t ae 4 /* ey : , i BS a am | & * 1 ;J: Bs ro 4a ry — 7 a aae a afi| taodF- Pu 4 ie 4 7?" =i -a- ——

be Hi eel? a FEES on bm ws ew Pig

— = ee “=e ei ; A B |

AP 2 oe « ie ee Eo iL : , rH x a a re

Cee wae oe

Po PY 73%. IS Nive ss se rd | , ual |, 3 mn a a 1A * qQ = | Fa: alii as 7 CeBae , ‘ 3 jmh i 7" &, 7 on 4 7 _£ ages s a.mS LE PWOMe cw Aa piehe 4 :AYES a: a ee) SeSse" Se

Lat : 4 = Ps « | ’ ee = ; aaa) ' « oe , + smers yyy Oy BATA gar ' >, "Wa F' Jhae on? ee rt ot cae - eae‘' | . i | a Pag ; e; "= > . LLt conse (a ‘ * adSR te py i =yt‘

deae . \A+ne a De “@ G2. enhs | ry 8 a ;™ - NY ,pirate i eee | aa ap ae Lien oo ee eee od 4 Su Sah) in pray DIRan ST IS ay 9 SC }

Be. Wanbatyabne rhe Sort nn Remy

iPee - csip AF : Er y‘. 4aie i oe' A ,‘ 24 heSe “— aeamy oeSS aeiaa éa. *bis- on

ey pre, a :‘aed fr a . pete = J .AN :4 | ae. | ot a ; aie - ~ _ “\ 4 d pte Be ;

Figure 5. Hollekreisch. Minhagbuch, Niirnberg cod. 7058, fol. 43b—44b, from 1589. Photo courtesy of Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Ntimberg

|4»

é 1‘ .' +j *: im 7]ee\

rad stl + ba 14 a may 40 tisbaay Sia wees % y aa

abushipayi: toy t7 a a8 mow +2 \. santav Jatspicaro 4} savin} C sup ats[i| Pr

TMi AN“Le st@NPies ! JW QW Oo aHEY poe abi eB = , aire eke i Megatee: a | uaizs .? 4 jh al ee Pe i

Neiok na ani) ABE . HVE nal + r, hs “Bia ' i: Val Nyae* Amt WM aby Pen 42! Pe Wee sour 7

{ . ny(alent Pe (od RUM) SIND) HID he | sa Pt s Me ates peiny “youll? ounaida 4f'| wait

mw re™ OS OE ee at Poaali PIOe ahhh

} ryrw«,pnA{* inea, .-; saint \. frag aoe Ss a ag a) poe Td)aeoa

1 " . ee by ae 4

prpttona Wet\ by om [aarp pe us 7 } om

: / MINDIP Lay wpa ADWAT poss {5 ‘3 bs, | | © indo arz) th wT Das py qe ES b 3 of — whos vo tb ates be rar: fa ard) AL? 4 | co alpha Sh A893 Nea sien see Woon

oa a ri * ‘ i . the

ve : ‘ me": , ane NA 2 — 8 te 4 | \ a BY

bers. hn |Ai ah H M4eygan rte\B> =israe 7.3h aes \j ‘| £/| aviv ¢ Spe Le). 7a Be = oaaNt ee ¥, 4 ¥, Af ad teh & _ =I

|g) Sey oe i ee

| ¥a ee ea pe meat 5 ees SheEe S| ‘ | | ees | “4 aly, Lera Re fo ae mary hi ; [2 ~ ia — tp. Pa. i ci hal a z e i or * t ~~ a ic >. ee Fe" =’. f R. Moses Mintz explains that the Hollekreisch took place on the Sabbath that the parturient left her house — in other words, approximately four to five weeks after birth. The name given at the Hollekreisch is also sometimes called a shem ‘arisa — cradle name.” Some scholars have suggested that the act of naming the baby in the cradle gave the ritual its name. They explained that the word Hollekreisch was composed of two parts: Kreisch, meaning cradle or, in French, créche, and hol trom the Hebrew word hol.!° This explanation, however, has no linguistic credibility. The medieval French word for cradle was not the modern créche, but rather brez or brig, a word that became the modern French berceau. ‘This word appears a number of times in Rashi’s commentary on the Talmud."! Another explanation commonly given for the name Hollekreisch is based on the comments of the fifteenth-century R. Moses Mintz. He said: For after the parturient who gave birth to a girl leaves her house, it is a custom to name the baby, and that naming is called Hallekreisch. | heard a reason from my father, may his memory be blessed, who heard from his mentors, that the meaning of Hallekreisch is that they cry out at that time to the [female] baby a not holy name and the same for a baby boy. For example if the “holy” name is Samuel and the hol name is Zanvil, they call him Zanvil at that time, etc... . And Hallekreisch is made up of two words, Halle from hol and kreisch, meaning “to cry out.” In other words, the shem hol that is cried out and announced, for in the language of Lower Ashkenaz, they call a cry kreisch.'4

This same explanation appears in the writings of other early modern authorities. One of them, R. Israel b. Shalom Shakhna of Lublin (d. 1558), explains that this custom is not the custom of the rabbis: “It is not the custom of Rabbis to give names to infants. Only children gather and lift up the baby and cry out his not-holy name. And all this is called Hallekreisch.”'!* The same explanation also appears at length in R. Joseph Neurlingen’s (1570-1637) book Yosef Omez.'4

This suggestion, however, does not fit the ritual performance. If the mean-

ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS 97 ing of the name Hollekreisch is the calling of the baby by a shem hol, why did the participants yell out “Holle, Holle”? How did yelling “Holle, Holle” help give the infant a name? At the end of the nineteenth century, two Jewish scholars hinted at what they saw as a solution to this question, and I will follow in their footsteps. Moritz Giidemann and Joseph Perles suggested in passing, that the cry “Holle, Holle” did not derive from the word hol, but rather from the name of a Germanic goddesslike figure by the name of Frau Holle.!? This suggestion was greeted with dismay by some traditional Jewish scholars.!° In fact, folkloristic studies concerning the figure of Frau Holle strengthen the assumption that the Holle who is called upon is in fact this Germanic figure. Frau Holle was well known throughout northern Europe and was called by a number of different names such as Freyja, Stampa, Frau Rose, Perchta, and Befania, but principally as Frau Holle or Holda.'7 All these figures shared a number of common features and were closely associated with women. They were goddesses of the house and were held responsible for burnt baked goods as well as for improperly woven garments.!® Most important, Frau Holle and her cohorts were closely connected with babies and fertility. Frau Holle was

believed to wander the forests leading a group of babies whom she had snatched, especially during the winter months.!? These kidnapped babies were susceptible to Frau Holle’s machinations because they were as yet unbaptised. The children in her entourage were all tied to one another, and the last one, according to the legends, held a jug filled with tears, the tears belonging to his mother. One of the ways in which children could allegedly be released from Frau Holle’s clutches or protected from her was by giving them a Christian name, as she did not kidnap baptized children.*° Frau Holle is mentioned in a number of medieval sources as part of a female religious practice that the church sought to abolish. The first source in which Frau Holle is mentioned is Burchard of Worms’s Decretum. In the nineteenth chapter of this book, entitled Corrector et medicus, Burchard discusses the penance for women who followed Frau Holle. He warns of women who, “with a throng of demons transformed into the likenesses of women (she whom common folly calls the witch Hulda) ride on certain beasts on special nights and be numbered among their company.”*!

References to Frau Holle can be found in later sources as well. One thirteenth-century author laments the fact that some women pray to her daily, more than they do to the Virgin Mary herself.* As the folklorist Waschnitius demonstrated in the sources he collected on Frau Holle, her nightly travels were common knowledge. As mentioned, the principal strategy used to protect children from Frau Holle was baptism. However, in cases in which children had not yet been baptized, they were taken to church by women and picked up three times, while those present called out “Holle, Holle, Holle,” and gave the child a name.*? Of course, once midwives and laypeople were given the authority to baptize babies in case of emergency (as was declared in a variety

98 CHAPTER THREE of synods from the thirteenth century onward), the need to trick Frau Holle into thinking a baby had been baptized was no longer as pressing. In light of this discussion of Frau Holle and her position in medieval Christian culture, let us return to the Jewish Hollekreisch ritual. Is there any additional evidence that Jews were aware of and believed in figures like Frau Holle? It is well known that Jews in Germany and northern France believed in a wide range of demons and witches, as did their Christian neighbors. Sefer Hasidim

contains many examples of discussions concerning werewolves and streyas (witches), and these figures were often associated with women.** In addition, there is a reference to Frau Holle herself in Sefer Or Zaru’a, in a discussion of a witch who has harmed a certain woman.’ These shared beliefs should not surprise us, if we consider that the earliest Jewish and Christian authors concerning Frau Holle lived in close proximity. Buchard of Worms, the author of the first source mentioning Frau Holle, lived near a large Jewish community, and the Jews of Worms could certainly have been aware of Frau Holle, if belief in her was commonplace at the time. I would suggest that this ceremony is most likely one of a number of customs practiced by Jews that were designed to deal with these demonic figures, who were also feared by Jews.

Some common features are remarkable in both the Jewish ritual and the Christian practices concerning Frau Holle. In both cases, great importance is attached to giving the infant a name so as to protect the child. In both cases, the baby is lifted up and the participants call out “Holle, Holle.” Even more important, in both cultures, the practices surrounding Frau Holle are not part of any official religious practice.*° Rather, they accompany or precede an official birth ritual, such as baptism or circumcision. It is significant that the participants are women in the Christian case, and children in the Jewish case, as this seems to highlight the unofficial nature of the practice. This phenomenon serves as a fascinating example of how members of two religious groups can nonetheless adopt the same practice, each to serve its own purposes. In the context of our discussion of birth rituals, the Jewish Hollekreisch ritual is yet another indication of the shared worlds and mentalities of Jews and Christians, particularly as they relate to the world of women. Members of each religious group chose to express their fear of Frau Holle in different ways. Christian children who were baptized at birth had no need for this ritual. Only children whose baptism was postponed for some reason needed protection from her.*’ On the other hand, it seems that every Jewish child, boys and girls alike, had a Hollekreisch. As they never received Christian names, Jews may have feared the consequences of lacking such. It should be noted that Frau Holle also had a Jewish equivalent, Lilith. According to traditions known centuries before the period under discussion, Lilith was a she-demon, extremely dangerous for newborns. Like Frau Holle, she would snatch them from their mothers and carry them off. Many Jewish amulets and incantations from the

ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS 99 medieval period were designed to ward off Lilith, whom I will discuss later in this chapter.*° We should note, however, that Jews chose to call out to Holle, rather than Lilith, when performing this ritual.

WACHNACHT

The custom of holding a meal at the home of the newborn the night before circumcision, known as Wachnacht in early modern sources,” is frequently mentioned in medieval sources, where it is often called Leili brit milah —the eve of circumcision. [ will begin my discussion of the Wachnacht by outlining its customs as described in these sources. Our earliest description appears in Mahzor Vitry, which discusses the meal on the eve of circumcision. As we saw in the previous chapter, this meal was the responsibility of the ba’al brit. The Mahzor says: For the five kinds of grain like oublies and cantelles,*® in cases in which these are the main foods at the meal, as is our custom on the eve of circumcision ceremony, recite the blessing “HaMozi Lehem min ha’Arez.”?!

The Mahzor goes on to describe the evening’s events: The tradition of our fathers is Torah and a righteous man should adhere to it. On the eve of the eighth [day] the ba’al brit makes a feast in honor of the commandment. *?

This meal on the eve of the circumcision ceremony was sponsored by the ba’al brit; special foods were eaten on the occasion. Some scholars have suggested that this meal was a medieval development of the meal referred to in the Tosetta (Megilla 3:15) as Shavu’a haBen (lit., the week of the son). This ancient event is mentioned along with Shavu’a haBat (lit., the week of the daughter). We should not, however, connect the ancient Shavu’a haBen to the meal held in medieval times the night before the circumcision ceremony, as the ancient text seems to refer to the circumcision ceremony and the meal held after it.*? Moreover, while medieval commentators also discussed the practice of Shavu’a haBen, they did not connect it to the meal held on the eve of circumcision. Rather, they thought this was the feast the father held after the circumcision ritual took place. ** The gathering on the eve of circumcision is mentioned for the first time in Mahzor Vitry, and no explanation is given for it. The description in Mahzor Vitry does not tell us where the meal took place, but, based on later sources, we may surmise that it was held in the house of the parturient, at her bedside.

During medieval times, there is little mention of what went on during the course of the evening, other than the mention of the food served. Later sources, however, discuss card playing as well as the study of Torah.*? They explain that

100 CHAPTER THREE the purpose of the meal was to ward off Lilith.*° If this is so, then the Wachnacht fulfilled a purpose similar to that of the Hollekreisch. The custom of holding a meal on the eve of circumcision is not unique to Ashkenazi Jews. It may be found in other communities in Provence and Spain as well as more distant diasporas. The fear of Lilith was widespread throughout the Jewish diasporas.*’ In medieval Germany and France, the existing beliefs and fears were connected to the common belief concerning Frau Holle. The holding of a vigil on the night before circumcision can be seen as a measure to protect the child, before circumcision, from lurking evil spirits as well as from other risks. Viewed in this manner, the Wachnacht is similar to the practice of leaving food out for Frau Holle on the nights after birth or to the vigil held to protect the infant on the night preceding the baptism ceremony. This vigil, which also included a meal, was meant to protect the infant from various evil spirits, such as Frau Holle, though she is not singled out. The vigil, like the Wachnacht, was hosted by the co-parents.*® One last detail mentioned in the sources merits further inquiry — the food consumed at the Wachnacht. Mahzor Vitry mentions oublies and cantilles as the foods eaten during these festivities.*”? Oublies are wafers and canesteles or cantilles are little cakes. These baked goods were not made by the Jews, but were bought from their Christian neighbors, who ate them at their own feasts and celebrations.t° They were considered festive foods, and Jews ate them not only at circumcision meals, but also on Purim. This fact comes up several times in halakhic discussions on the permissibility of eating pat akum (bread made by non-Jews).*! It would seem that, at their birth ceremonies, Jews ate the same foods as were customary for Christian birth ceremonies! As in the case of the Hollekreisch ritual, the information we have concerning the Wachnacht is not as extensive as that concerning circumcision. Both customs supported the birth and ritual process in Jewish society and dealt with the ever present fear of demons in the medieval world. As this fear was common to both Jews and the surrounding Christians, we find that parallel Jewish and Christian customs developed to overcome it; in the case of the Hollekreisch, we see how the Jews even adapted Christian customs.

THE SABBATH OF THE PARTURIENT

Like the Hollekreisch, the ritual for the parturient took place a month after birth. Unlike the customs discussed earlier, there is no mention of this or similar practices preceding the fifteenth-century source found in R. Moses Mintz’s responsa, in which the Hollekreisch is mentioned as well.t* R. Moses does not describe the ritual in detail, as his comment comes in the context of a discussion of divorce procedures. He mentions that the Hollekreisch took place on the Sabbath that the parturient left her house after birth to go to the synagogue.

ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS 10] If so, two birth rituals — one for the baby and one for the mother — took place on the same day. The parturient’s ritual has received scant attention in research over the years. Leopold Léw is one of the few scholars who devoted attention to this custom in his book Die Lebensalter in der jtidischen Literatur published in 1875. He suggested that this ritual was connected to both the biblical custom (Lev. 12) of bringing a sacrifice to the temple after birth and to the medieval Christian ritual known as churching (in German: Aussegnung or Kirchengang), in which the parturient went to church for the first time after birth. Léw argued that the

late medieval Jewish ritual was an adaptation of the Christian churching ritual, which, in turn, was an adaptation of the biblical rite.*? My analysis will investigate Low’s suggestion concerning the connection between the Jewish parturient ritual and the Christian ritual of churching. After comparing the two, and the different interpretations attributed to the churching ritual by a variety of scholars, I will suggest an interpretation of both the Jewish and the Christian customs in a comparative perspective. The Jewish Ritual While the parturient ritual is mentioned in fitteenth-century sources only in passing, it is described in greater detail in the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century sources. The only Jewish source that includes a long description of the custom is the seventeenth-century book of customs written by Juspa the Shammes of Worms (1604—1678).** R. Juspa outlines the different stages of the lying-in period. He describes a ritual process, in which the Sabbath ritual was the last of three stages. For the first two and a half to three weeks after birth, the parturient lay in bed and was tended by her friends. Some of the information we have about this stage comes trom descriptions of the circumcision ceremony. Although the mother did not attend this ritual, she helped prepare for it. Juspa reports: Three days before the circumcision, just before minha |afternoon prayers], the shammes calls: Zu der jtidisch Kerze |to the Jewish candles] up and down the street.

And the women come to the parturient’s house, and they wash the child and they throw coins into the bathing water, which are for the servant who is helping the parturient.*? And they make the jtidischen Kerzen and twelve small wax candles that are lit during morning prayers on the day of circumcision in the synagogue. *° And every time the baby is being bathed they call some women to come to the commandment |mizvah| of washing the baby and they throw money into the bathing water for the maid.*’

The preparation of candles mentioned here is not an early modern innovation. As we saw in the previous chapter, other sources discuss the preparation of twelve candles for circumcision but do not provide details on who prepared them or where they were prepared.

102 CHAPTER THREE During this first stage, the parturient is attended to by friends and, in some cases, a maid. On the Sabbath about three weeks after birth, the parturient got out of bed, changed her sheets and clothing and hosted her friends who came to visit. This stage was called the Pftihl (lit. pillow). She then spent an additional week in bed. The third stage began a week later, on Friday. The parturient changed her clothes and put white sheets on her bed. She cleaned and dressed the baby. This was called die weisse Pftihle. That Sabbath morning, she proceeded to the synagogue, accompanied by her female friends and neighbors. She wore her Sabbath clothes covered with shrouds and on her head she wore a hat covered with a veil or scart. The scarf and the shrouds were meant to trick any lurking evil spirits by suggesting that this woman was mourning rather than celebrating.t® The woman’s arrival in the synagogue was timed to coincide with the beginning of the morning blessings that preceded the recital of the Shema, and special tunes were sung in her honor. If the baby was a boy, the woman gave the synagogue the embroidered wimpel. The wimpel was the cloth diaper from the circumcision ceremony that was embroidered by the mother and her friends. These wimpels were used to wrap the Torah scrolls in the synagogue (see figure 6). The father of the baby was called to the Torah and said a blessing for his wife. ‘The parturient herself did not play any active role in the synagogue ritual. After services, she took off the scart she had covered her head with and the shrouds she had worn and returned to her home accompanied by her friends. She prepared a meal for them and gave them small gifts of baked goods and fruit. That same afternoon, the Hollekreisch ritual took place. Aspects of this ritual process are illustrated in two illustrations from eighteenth-century books (see figures 6 and 7). A ditterent seventeenth-century source emphasizes the fact that every parturient, even those whose babies died immediately after birth, underwent this ritual. R. Yuda Levy Kirkhum’s (d. 1632) book Sefer Minhagot Wormeisa states:

“If the infant died within the first thirty days, the hazan (cantor) nevertheless says Kaddish in a special tune on the Sabbath that the women lead the parturient to the synagogue.”*? The parturient is such a central focus of this ritual, that even if the baby died she was still expected to undergo this ceremony. R. Yuda Kirkhum emphasizes that despite the death of the infant, services are to be held in a joyous manner. A different custom book from the sixteenth century supplies an alternative explanation for the ritual: It says in the Torah concerning a parturient: “On the completion of her period of purification, for either son or daughter, she shall bring to the priest, at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, a lamb in its first year for a burnt offering, and a pigeon or a turtledove for a sin offering.” R. Simeon b. Yohai was asked by his disciples: “Why did the Torah ordain that a woman after childbirth should bring a sacrifice?” He replied: “When she kneels in bearing she swears impetuously that she will have no more intercourse with her husband. The Torah therefore ordained

SS.Hi=eeaiNii,sae ee, ae:epee tet ee | San. ices] | A Hi iat Fj ee ake. enA -- Le L e——s —=om csea! | ae43:Ne We, | Se ae Ee io ok —ai, oad ee 6 pee Ze ADDITIONAL BIRTH RITUALS 103

ia =r en |f| H HlijAk { halla=itesa et ete - rigsr i pe Meal 4 a. ~ .. ttae/

. ; | ee (ae Hh PE mth Fe am

| : ? z pe. renee si r =i=)- = t ih i uel i Bi: Rt : ia : + : Hh i ‘

|| 4 ee eee peel ee By Nee cs: =_— we )

aN Al ee en eS

ae ; aale. ny yg. ; Me : FS he Sj ¥xteHt ia | otgl/ Ree eeieeey of ail= OF |1iin fae) ,ee a ak. ei. Al t ‘te, , ae aI, :en‘y Vz ipo, be ; jae gf i| a ea A Pe Oe et: ae 5 Le i 7 7. +: a F ? es, ee F | J Be oF oe, iy Git Hei at be + pel ens r , oe a 7 Oet Be be gar 7 3 ‘ee F ay * ore Ste fos eae ‘ / s ft < " eps:

ve At he Pgee: gs [ ayofgBee i “Cee * dmh a ave f i i.lame, weaefl 2 aeee 2Sod ee be

|:The ————— SiPRL S=. . SS — — ae F ; ”HFA 7 a, OTs ear al ae! ee= eece: eee ae WISI Ssel |

Peers See ie us ‘ae WeVee Se | |ee oe||)shrete B Mh 4 il eee A ee ih te i al ites Hg" ge es | BAe MA ae OP b> e ye | Ros VS eek || Halt Te AheTa a ee aeie er (ccgo OE aaeePe li RN ae eee ta! fig de) oe Fj Af JMUH NR | ; ; s alge 2 a lit bes: =. a i ; Z fi te ait (es en ees éf Hee ty ii! ah 4 {]

EE 4 allie ; +8 i f ae - isto, =e : 8 i 3 : ii a) “| i ‘ Bet ie ; 8 7 , ; lal lf

Ler Age. a ome Fe aNie, oe) i— . Si aeeae | Th a ee Ee eee Se Me ee 4 5. | |ANG Aa GaeN A epeeNS Gen ¥a. aga 2 hy RRS a E ics, 1eet Se a

St ee er. aa eeee Ses) ef SSS “SeSe. is

=e i ee OMS P< Pe le SD Se ae eee aes iE hae |

ait a Ss ee, cae | | A number of medieval penances discuss overlaying: I found an answer about a woman who found her child dead in her bed. If she is not pregnant and is not nursing, and is also healthy, let her do penance for a year, but only if her husband wishes that she do so. And if she is young and is not used to fasting, let them [the woman and her husband] fast Mondays and Thursdays until they complete a year of fasting. And it is good if, to the greatest extent possible, they do not lay the children down in their beds, unless they see a need.!!*

Another response on the same topic is attributed to R. Meir b. Barukh: Maharam was asked about a woman who lay on her son and killed him, what her penance should be. And R. Meir instructed her to fast for a full year: not to eat meat or drink wine except for on the Sabbath and the holidays and New Moons, and Hanuka and Purim, when she should eat meat and drink wine. And in compensation for those holidays and new moons and Hanuka and Purim, on which she does not fast, she should fast on other days instead, until she has completed 365 days of fasting. And subsequently, she should fast every week — on Mondays and Thursdays, according to her strength. And she should eat meat and drink wine. Throughout all of her pregnancy and her days of nursing, she should not fast, and she should be careful not to let her son rest [in the same bed] with her.!!?

This response was well known in subsequent generations as well.!!© The legal authorities refer not only to the penance but also to the need to educate

PARENTS AND CHILDREN 177 parents to lay their children down to sleep in cradles and not in their beds.!!” It is clear from the penances mentioned above, that the authors realize that at certain times, the children must be in their mother’s bed. ‘They encourage the mothers, however, to place the child back in his/her own bed after nursing.!!® While none of these penances voice the assumption that the child was overlaid on purpose, they all seem to assume that it is the mother, rather than her husband, who might be with the child in the same bed and who is responsible for the overlying. Based on these penances from the thirteenth century, Urbach argued that the problem of overlaying arose in Ashkenaz at the end of the thirteenth century. He suggested that the reason was a deterioration in Jewish living quarters at this time. There is little evidence, however, that such a change took place at the end of the thirteenth century. Moreover, as Urbach himself noted, Christian penitential manuals discuss this problem from the sixth century onward. The Christian penance was to fast for a year, during which the penitent should eat only bread and drink only water and refrain from eating meat and drinking wine for two more years.'!? It is unlikely that Jews and Christians whose material surroundings were similar would have different overlying rates. The Jewish sources that discuss overlying do not mention any details related to the physical surroundings of the home. In contrast, Christian sources are willing to condone overlying in poor homes much more readily than in affluent ones, although the punishment is still sometimes very harsh.!*° As Peter Abelard remarked: For look, some poverty-stricken woman has a little baby at the breast and doesn’t have enough clothes to be able to meet the needs both of the little one in the crib and of herself. So, moved by pity for the little baby, she puts him by her side to warm him with her own rags. In the end, overwhelmed in her own feebleness by the force of nature, she is driven to smother the one she embraces with the greatest love. Augustine says: “Have charity and do whatever you want.” Yet when she comes to the bishop for atonement, a heavy penalty is exacted from her, not for a fault she committed, but to make her or other women more careful about anticipating such dangers.!*!

Jewish sources do not distinguish between incidents of overlying in poor and in more affluent homes. It thus seems problematic to assume that a change in physical conditions in the thirteenth century gave rise to these penances. It seems more likely that as penances became more and more integral to mainstream Judaism, these penances became accepted for cases of overlying. These ditterent instances of children’s deaths reveal the problems in generalizing about child care in the past. Within Jewish society, as within Christian society, there were instances of neglect and abuse due to individual nature or, more often, extenuating circumstances such as poverty and single motherhood. An examination of these cases of neglect, however, along with the norms

178 CHAPTER FIVE outlined in the first part of the chapter reveals the value system of medieval Jews. We will examine one additional and rather extraordinary facet of this question — the killing of children during times of persecution in sanctification of the name of God.

A DIFFERENT MODE OF ABANDONMENT

We have witnessed the competing interests that could obstruct parental love and devotion and at times endanger children. Because women gave birth and because care of young children was the mothers’ responsibility, many of the instances discussed above had to do with neglect or lack of care on the mothers’ part. These competing interests may be illuminated by examining another, very different category of actions. Some scholars who have discussed maternal “cruelty” in medieval Christian society have not limited their study to infanticide practices, but also to the cases of mothers who wished to enter convents and abandoned their children, either to relatives or elsewhere. Some suggested that this willingness to leave children so the mothers could enter a holier way of life was additional proof that medieval parents did not care for their children.!** In two studies on women and

motherhood written during the last decade, Clarissa Atkinson and Barbara Newman have suggested a different way of looking at such cases. They have argued that mothers who left their children in order to enter a convent, or even expressed joy at the death of their children, did not do so out of cruelty. Rather, they saw their sacrifice as a way of advancing their spirituality. Martyrs such as St. Felicitas and St. Perpetua, who preferred martyrdom even when they were forced to abandon their nursing infants, served as role models and sources of encouragement. Three additional figures that were popular in medieval Germany were St. Julita, St. Felicitas, and St. Symphorosa (fg. 9). They are almost mythological figures, each of whom was killed with a number of infants.!*? Biblical models were also called upon in this context. The Virgin Mary, who sacrificed her son, was one, as were biblical stories such as the sacrifice of Isaac, the dedication of Samuel to the Temple, and the story of Jepthe’s daughter.!7+ According to Newman and Atkinson, these role models enabled medieval women to express their grief over parting from their children, while arguing that they had sacrificed their most precious possessions — their children — to serve the Lord.!*? According to Newman’s interpretation, Chaucer’s Griselda serves as an example of such behavior and response. Griselda, who was told of the death of her children, responded without tears and with meekness. How-

ever, when she discovered that her children were alive, she wept like a mother.!° Newman interprets her weeping “like a mother” as a description of expected motherly behavior, in contrast to her previous behavior that expressed, not cruelty, but her devotion to her husband and to God. In this light,

PARENTS AND CHILDREN 179

aie -7cu{ fepte = fil filys sa Felicitas

;7 “4 | NO Hi A LPN8 ,,

an | an" rs A( \\"tae ™m$ NJ ya __. 4 Le ASF My as \ ayASH NY / 5ODN ?) y “6 ‘ewy | NS , ~WE Ni . « é NNysaK A NY VAor Y [IAS

INE Alte ™ myIAs S =\\JN) N

i re) | ve we AY A Yi ASS .

Nt ae in i. js “= ?

;PUES Bf NTLY RDAN) 7 1G,

N if ‘ AN V4 sg YG he= iySENS { Ad iy Ne Se SE

Figure 8. “Felicitas cum septem filiis.” Schedel, Hartmann (1440-1514); Wolgemut Michael (1434-1519); Pleydenwurff Wilhem (d.1493), Liber chronicarum — Nuremberg Chronicle (A. Koberger, 1493). Photo courtesy of Archives and Research Collections, William Ready Division, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

we may consider those women who left their children in order to enter a convent as making a difficult choice in order to further their spirituality, rather than women whose maternal instincts and compassion were impaired.!*7 In Jewish society there was no equivalent to monastic life, and a spiritual life lived outside of the framework of the family was not a viable option for either women or men. As such, this case of Christian parental behavior has no clear parallel. Nevertheless, the study of women who chose monastic life can provide us with a better understanding of medieval Jewish society. The Jewish practice of sanctifying the name of God (Kiddush haShem), which included the killing of children in order to prevent their baptism, serves as a comparative case study. This practice became part of the Ashkenazic tradition in wake of the First Crusade, when a number of communities chose death over baptism. The chronicles that report these events, which were all written well after

180 CHAPTER FIVE the Crusade, go to great lengths to describe the parents, and especially the mothers, who chose to take their children’s lives rather than allow them to be captured by the Crusaders.!7° Although I do not argue that the abandonment of a child in order to enter a convent and the killing of a child can be equated, Jews and Christians used the same models to justify their behavior. Jews during the First Crusade alluded to the sacrifice of Isaac as a model for their deeds,!7” and there are some hints at a tradition that extols the killing of the daughter of Jephte as well.!*° In addition, the story of the mother and her seven sons was an extremely popular one in medieval Jewish literature. The narratives of parents, many of them mothers, who chose to kill their children emphasize the tremendous sacrifice of the parents who insisted on their children’s death.!*! The mother in Sefer Yossipon, the popular medieval account of the mother and her seven sons, calls upon what was understood as the essence of motherhood in order to encourage her son’s death (figure 9). She says: My son, forsake all this! For I bore you in my belly for nine months and nursed you for three years. And after I nursed you . . . I sustained you with food until this very day and taught you the fear of the Lord. And now, my son, look up to the heavens and see the earth and the sea with your brothers. ... Go, my son, and cleave onto your brothers, and may you enjoy the lot of their glory. And I shall come with you there and rejoice with you as on your wedding day and partake of the rewards of your righteousness with you.! *4

The medieval text introduces certain elements not present in the narrative in 2 and 4 Maccabees. In 2 Maccabees, the mother speaks “in the spirit of a man” and “in the language of the fathers.” She claims that she “does not know how they entered her womb” and emphasizes her pregnancy, but these details emphasize her reversal of roles in this scene in which she acts with ‘man-like courage. ”!>> In 4 Maccabees, the narrator emphasizes that were the mother to act like a mother, “if the woman had been weak in spirit — being, as she was, a mother —she would have complained and lamented ‘in vain my sons did I endure those many travails for you.””!*+ In the medieval text, she claims her rights as a mother who bore the children in pain, fed them and nursed them, and with this power commands them to die rather than save themselves. The shared models — both the biblical stories and the figure of the mother and her seven sons—were central to Christian and Jewish traditions in the Middle Ages. The expectation that women would devote themselves to their children is what made their decision to devote themselves to God and as a result sacrifice their children whether by abandonment or death all the more admirable.!*° In light of this, one can see the choices made by Christian and Jewish parents as reflecting similar value systems, although those values were part of two traditions that were often in conflict.!*° Devotion to God was expressed by giv-

PARENTS AND CHILDREN 181]

‘i

6 ee SP ee Be ee oe

* ‘a J : — a re ee. —-_ - eal ay am ee oe rat a

7 “a } x ae a é PS rs — * = , . oe f .. oy > ES

igo h ae aa: ay ~ Gee: : ~~ ri e # ' ‘ze 4 Yee pelt / Pe ee pS . WA ae _ 1 4 (Me mr) iY ra. ha ® : he Ve os ig =~

Re Pe SS ae ae, We ie og Tk

a" . ar a # Cal a f ie “s i . i

|4rs, i Sa2Fes * |‘1,. #‘ he ate%,} 1% om’ ‘a ~GG } reAe a. := :

Ee OS Ae | ORE

x (= ‘ f 4? wea - ont w% t eee | &‘} Ly“A " F sm Tig } 1¥ ' st 7ula ® Ar rfoy _i 5)ae i-atoais iHN 4% % es ee! ol 57Ais \ "ht @ _a\,ta‘to 7 iF

4 a? >) ty oF bs 1G f ata oo i # ,.toe : : BV et }3Ya ,